Went to the aquarium of the pacific the other day with my parents and brother and got to see their new frog exhibit! If you're in the Long Beach/ Los Angeles area, I highly recommend checking it out! They even had golden mantellas which are from Madagascar. The two images below are of the...
Thank you everyone!! I think I said this last year, but I hope to be more active on the forums this year. You guys are literally saving cham lives, so hopefully I be on to make your lives a little easier (and more fun ;)).
I used to use these millipedes as part of my clean up crew. They will eat leaf litter and chameleon poop just like any other springtail or isopod. Basically any small critter will fill the clean up crew role if the niche is open in your cage. If you want to help prevent an infestation or...
How cold is "cold"? Veiled chameleons are montane chameleons and can take cold nights. But to answer your question, I've used a variety of methods to lift up a fixture off the top of an enclosure. I've created an arm out of pvc that lifts the fixture up. Essentially it was a square frame with 4...
Sorry for your losses. It's always tough losing babies. Luckily this year I didn't incur any losses with my pygmies. All 5 Brookesia superciliaris are subadults now.
May I ask why you chose perlite to incubate the eggs? While perlite and vermiculite look similar, they act very differently. In...
You can put a slice of banana in with the babies and hope to draw in small flies while you wait for food. When this years Brookesia supercilaris hatched, they were also a surprise. Luckily I had some fungats gnats in there for them to eat. They went 3 or 4 days without me supplying vendor-bought...
Nice work! This is going to be a game-changer for many keepers. Now there's no excuse for raising up babies in groups. Aside from this being an absolutely amazing cage. I wonder if people would also be more willing to use these cages as displays at reptile expos. Small, easy to move. Bye bye...
Good to see you back on the forums!
Update on the babies: they are growing up nicely! I'll try to get more pics of them this week to share here on the forums. They're on 1/8th inch crickets now :)
It's called a reptibreeze because it's a breeze for crickets to escape. I've had crickets and even full-grown dubia roaches escape my reptibreezes before.
Sometimes the calcium dust that we use to powder the crickets can come off when dumping in the crickets. This creates a thin layer of dust over time that crickets can climb on and eventually get out. You could try rinsing out the feeder run and see if that helps.
Crickets usually don't jump...
If you have dragon ledges in your dragonstrand enclosure, you can secure the normal PVC feeder runs to the ledges by drilling a hole through the feeder run and then using thick jewelry wire to run through the hole and around the ledge. I got mine from full-throttle feeders. You will need a drill...
I will say that it might be difficult to get pictures of the babies without a human hand since they are just so tiny and my camera will just focus on anything else but them haha
Feel free to take pictures from this thread: https://www.chameleonforums.com/threads/more-baby-pygmy-chameleons.193055/#post-1806437
Any pics I post here are free to use by you and the forums
Thank you! I absolutely agree with you! Despite looking like a tiny brown leaf, they sure are beautiful! Beauty isn't always linked to having color the brightest rainbow colors - though it sure does help :)
I pick them up incredibly gently 😅 I feel like the way I just pick them up and grab them...
Hi everyone, it's that time of the year when I log on to the forums and post some pygmy content!
Long story short, I hatched out 4 pygmy chameleons this past week!
Some more pics:
Here are the temporary grow-out enclosures.
Last year, I hatched out two pygmies (Brookesia superciliaris)...