In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: One of the most important things to keep in mind when feeding your beardie is that any and all food items it eats should be no bigger than the space between its eyes. If the food items are larger than this, it could cause choking, impaction, and hind-leg paralysis. Beardies are omnivores, meaning that they eat both animal and plant matter. However, hatchlings and juveniles have specific dietary needs. Offer as many tiny insects as your beardie will eat in a five-to-ten-minute time frame. When your beardie stops eating, stop offering. Young bearded dragons can eat anywhere from 20-60 pinhead crickets a day.  Provide hatchlings with a diet of small insects. If you are caring for a very young bearded dragon, you'll need to give it very small prey, such as pinhead crickets and tiny, freshly molted worms. You can very gradually introduce day-old pinkie mice when they are ready. Feed juvenile dragons (two to four months old) a mix of 80 percent small insects and 20 percent greens (see below for recommendations). Young dragons need to be fed two to three times per day. The adult diet is about 60 to 65 percent of plant foods and 30 to 45 percent of prey items. Calcium-rich leafy greens and other veggies should make up the bulk of the diet.  Feed a "salad" based on collards, dandelion greens and flowers, escarole, endive, grape leaves, mustard greens, turnip greens, and/or watercress. You can add the following to the salad to balance it out: acorn squash, red and green bell peppers, butternut squash, green beans, lentils, peas, pumpkin and other winter squash, snow peas, sweet potatoes, and turnips. Cook or microwave squashes before feeding to soften them up. Give the following veggies sparingly as treats: cabbage, chard, and kale (which are high in calcium oxalates and can cause metabolic bone disease); carrots (high in Vitamin A, which in high levels can be toxic); spinach, broccoli, and parsley (high in goitrogens, which decrease thyroid function); and corn, cucumbers, radishes, sprouts, and zucchini (these are low in nutrition). Spraying the greens with water will help them last longer and will also help keep your bearded dragon hydrated. Shred the veggies and mix them together in the salad to encourage your beardie to eat a variety of foods, rather than just picking out its favorites. You can also give your bearded dragon bites of the following:  apples, apricots, bananas, berries, cantaloupe, figs, grapes, mangos, oranges, papayas, peaches, pears, plums, tomatoes, Ficus benjamina, geraniums, hibiscus flowers and leaves, pansies, petunias, pothos, rose petals and leaves, snail vine, and violets. You can try feeding crickets, super worms, wax worms, mealworms, pinky mice, and hissing cockroaches.  "Gutload" the prey by feeding it a nutrient-rich diet one to two days before serving it to your beardie. For example, you can feed it ground legumes, cornmeal, carrots, sweet potatoes, collard greens, mustard greens, broccoli, spinach, apples, oranges, cereals, and rolled oats.  Any uneaten prey items should be removed from your dragon's enclosure. It is advisable to purchase the prey, since wild-caught prey (for example, something you catch in your yard) may have been exposed to toxic chemicals or have parasites that could be passed on to your dragon. Lightning bugs are toxic to your dragon. Silkworms are a good staple diet only if you have a sick or pregnant dragon. Buy a calcium supplement in powder form (without phosphate added) and sprinkle it over the salad and prey right before serving. Do this once per day for juveniles (under two years of age) and once or twice a week for adults.  You may also want to supplement Vitamin D3. Consult the product directions and/or your veterinarian about the amount of supplements to give, since over-dosing can lead to toxic levels. When it is time to shed, a bearded dragon may not eat. However, if it does not eat after more than three days and there is no sign of shedding, then your beardie may be ill. In that case, call your veterinarian to schedule an appointment. Offer the water in a shallow bowl. Wiggling your finger in the water may also get their attention. Bearded dragons like things that move, so creating ripples in the water may pique their curiosity. However, many dragons do not drink from a water bowl, so you may have to drip the water slowly onto your dragon's snout with a dropper.  Beardies often defecate in their water bowl, so change the water once a day (or immediately if you notice fecal matter). For the same reason, you'll need to disinfect the bowl once a week with a 1:10 bleach-water solution to avoid any bacterial build-up.  If your beardie is uninterested in drinking, spritz it lightly with water: it will lick the drops off its skin.
Summary: Feed items of an appropriate size. Give young bearded dragons a diet primarily consisting of small insects. Give your adult dragon plenty of greens. Feed fruit and certain plants as an occasional treat. Provide prey to sub-adult and adult dragons once a day, along with the fresh greens. Dust a phosphate-free calcium supplement on greens and insects. Do not get too alarmed if your bearded dragon does not eat. Provide fresh water daily.

Problem: Article: [Note: This only works on Tuesdays, and not in winter]  Buy a Casteliacone for ₽100.  She will buy your Casteliacone for ₽2000.
Summary:
Go to Castelia City. Walk up Mode street, which is the second from the right. Talk to the last person in the line for ice cream stand. Go to Nimbasa City and exit through the upper-right exit toward Driftveil Drawbridge. Enter the parked caravan/trailer and talk to the girl inside.