You must provide Ladybugs with fresh water and food, even if you think they are hibernating. Do not give them distilled water! Use Spring water, if possible, or use water that has been boiled and sat for 24 hours. For their food, use a small Styrofoam tray to put the food on so you can keep the area clean. (They also like to hide under the edges when you put it in a corner.) Use a sugar water mixture (1 part sugar to 10 parts water) or you can use hummingbird nectar mix. The nectar mix does provide more vitamins that then sugar water, but make sure you don't mix up big batches because it only keeps for about a week. Soak a few cottonballs in the food mixture and put them in empty caps from juice jugs. Make sure you change the cottonballs once a week, and add to them in-between if necessary. And, make sure you keep their regular drinking water full. Put a few small pebbles in a juice cap and keep the water level just full enough do that they can use the stones for safety. Do not just put a capful of water or it can be real easy for them to drown. If you want to give them a little variety to eat, give them a few pieces of fruit every once in awhile, but be sure you DO NOT give them anything acidic. The safest fruits are strawberries, apricots and raisins. Soak a raisin in water for a few hours to rehydrate it before you give it to them.
yes u can
The most famous Pillow Pet is the Lady bug.
You can if you want to. But it won't live long.
I have never personally seen a purple lady bug pillow pet but I have seen it in red. The red one can be bought at any mall, walmart, Walgreens etc.
crickets, grasshoppers, pratically any type of bug.
I have one! but u have to be lucky for it to work! Lady bug: 938473
Raisins. You feed them raisins. (I keep a lady bug in a plastic yougrt contaner)
i think you can feed it ants and maybe sum other insects. Also you could probablyfeed it sugar and leaves.
Try some exotic pet shops. I'd figure regular pet shops wouldn't carry it.
A lady bird is the british version of a lady bug, it is an Insect.
Yes you can keep any bugs in bug catchers (unless it is rare, illegal for that particular type or an endangered species).
Most lady bugs eat other insects. The most common insects lady bugs eat are aphids, which are pests that damage plants.