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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Tadpoles need protein in order to develop legs etc, if you give them blood worms which you can buy from petshops either dried or frozen (in little blocks) they will grow and develop well They will need an Island to climb up onto when they are ready and route to crawl out of the water butt. e.g. a plank, not too steep Frogs are great for the garden they eat slugs and bugs!!
Good luck!! Mel
Thanks for your help. I'll take it all on board. One thing I did notice in other questions about frogs, apparently once they've changed and gone their own sweet way, they come back to their breeding place the next year. What I don't understand is, how any managed to survive the original puddle to come back this year and breed. The puddle was deep(ish) originally, but like I said, it was rapidly drying out in the sun (we did have some!! - bearing in mind I'm from SE Scotland). It would have been the same last year - so how come?
Well done for saving the tadpoles from a certain death in their puddle. Frogs do mate in some surprising places !
I get lots of tadpoles in my mini pond and supplement their diet of algae, etc with lots of boiled lettuce. (the old fashioned butterhead variety with lots of green flesh seems to be best) plus goldfish flakes. However, if they are not moved to somewhere with a shallow end where they can escape out by the time they're developing legs they will all drown and die as they need to move to dry land and feed on tiny insects and slugs and worms when they grow bigger.
I'm sorry as your good deed now seems to have landed you with another dilemma in finding a more suitable watery area for your babies !! However, perhaps a small washing up bowl sunk into the ground and a mini plank running out of the water to ground level so the froglets can escape may be possible to build.
Who knows, you may be so hooked on watching them develop that next year you'll build a pond so that all the survivors will return.
Hi Shivvy - this link is quite informative & if you scroll down the page to No.5, it tells you how long it usually takes for taddies to develop into frogs.
Enjoy your taddies - so fascinating to watch!