What a lot of fun we had tadpole hunting in the creeks and water holes on our way to and from school. We used to keep some at school as well as at home. It was interesting watching them grow legs, lose their tail and turn into a frog. Last year we had 100s of frogs eggs, then tadpoles, then frogs, bred in the water in our old bathtub in the backyard. They were also in three round plastic tubs holding water, and in the moat around our water feature in our front yard. The frogs out the back were green, the ones in the moat were brown. For over nine months we had them breeding. There was still one in the moat after winter this year, it spent all winter in the moat, finally turned into a frog in early spring. The smell was potent, luckily when it rained the tank overflowed into the bathtub and flushed the water and made it a lot cleaner. We put net over the in and out overflow pipes on the tub so no tadpoles got washed out. We regularly took water out of the other tubs and the moat and put fresh in to make it cleaner. We took photos and videos of every different stage and sent the grandkids and some friends with young kids, they were fascinated. This year we had lots of frogs eggs in the bathtub again, then lots of tadpoles, but something, maybe a rival frog, has been eating them. We have very few tadpoles left, the number is diminishing every day. If we get more happening we will put a net over the tub to hopefully give them a chance. We have many different frogs croaking around our house pretty much daily now, and the neighbours have told us their frog population in their yards has increased as well.