or
Bookmark and Share
Cricket dispenser
 
   
Document Number
US Patent 5630374
Issued Date
May 20, 1997
Link
Inventors
Cunningham; John D. (Granada Hills, CA)
Map
Abstract
Apparatus for storing and dispensing crickets, as food, to a live reptile. A container possesses a smooth inner surface. A hollow tube, whose length exceeds the height of the container, possesses a smooth outer surface and an inner surface suitable for grasping by crickets. A top for the container has an interior aperture for accommodating the tube in a substantially-vertical attitude when inserted. A lateral aperture at the bottom of the container provides ingress for crickets into the tube while a cap at the top assures that the crickets cannot escape.
Tags:
Description:
Amusing 0%
Clever 0%
Complex 0%
Efficient 0%
Historic 0%
Important 0%
Innovative 0%
Interesting 0%
Practical 0%
Simple 0%
Number of Claims:
14
Comments:
no comments yet
Owner
David D. Rose (Van Nuys, CA)
Published
May 20, 1997
Application Number
08/520,141
Filed
August 28, 1995
US Classification
119/6.5  
Int'l Classification
A01K   61/02   (20060101)   A01K   67/033   (20060101)   A01K   67/00   (20060101)   A01K   97/04   (20060101)  
Examiner
Attorney/Law Firm
USPTO Field of Search
119/6.5   119/6.8   119/51.01  
Related Patents
6561125 - Insect storage and shipping container

An insect storage and shipping container which takes the form of a transparent vessel within which is mounted a pair of spaced apart panels. The panels can be used to hold food in cake form. The panels also include roughened surfaces in order to increase the amount of available space within the vessel for the insects to maneuver about. The lid of the vessel includes spacers which permit stacking of the containers in a manner to keep the air holes contained within the lid open. A grate may be installed in conjunction with the panels with the grate normally located a short distance from the floor of the vessel.

6758162 - Reptile feeder - Owned by Rolf C. Hagen, Inc. (Montreal,CA)

A feeding apparatus for use within a terrarium for feeding insects such as crickets to reptiles and/or other animals in the terrarium. The apparatus consists of a structure having a chamber in which the insects can move about, a cover that provides access to the chamber for introducing insects and powder supplements to the chamber, and a small port and manually removable port plug for enabling the insects to exit the chamber to the terrarium when the plug is removed. The structure and cover may create the image of a simulated rock. The feeding apparatus has a substantially flat surface for maintaining the rock structure in a stable position in the terrarium. Also disclosed is a method for feeding reptiles insects comprising the steps of pouring a vitamin powder supplement into a container with insects, closing the container, gently shaking the container to coat the insects with the powder, placing the container in a terrarium, and uncovering at least one opening in the container for insects to exit the container into the terrarium.

7174847 - Insect habitat and feeder

An insect storage, maintenance, dusting, and distribution device that dispenses living insects to caged animals. A Tower compartment is connected to a separate Dusting Chamber compartment with apertures on both compartments that may be aligned by rotating the Tower above the Dusting Chamber to form a passage for insects. The insects can move from the Tower to the Dusting Chamber which coats the insects with a nutritional dust. The insects are then allowed to move from the Dusting Chamber through a Feeder Tube into the animal(s)' habitat for their consumption by the animal.

6877269 - Insect container

A live insect container including a plurality of side walls and a bottom wall molded as a unitary structure, to form a hollow base, and having a common, peripheral, upper edge lying in a plane spaced-apart above the bottom wall, a first lid having a lower edge for fastenable sealing contact with the common, peripheral, upper edge of the base and including an upwardly oriented wall having a plurality of adjacent slots formed therethrough for allowing air currents to pass into and out of the container, a second lid formed in the first lid and pivotally openable upward therefrom to form, with the base and the first lid a fully enclosed container, a handle formed in the second lid, convertible from a first, carrying position, to a second, stored position, the second position out of conflict with the second lid during opening of the second lid, at least one hollow tube of terminal length for removable insertion through a one of the lids into the interior of the container, the tube first terminal end extending outside the container, when the tube is fully inserted into the container, and the tube second terminal end located in the interior of the container, and further including a removable end cap for temporarily capping one end of the tube.

Claims
Description
About| FAQs| Terms & Disclaimer| Link to Us| Contact Us