More importantly you need to figure out why he's spending so much time with his eyes shut. In most cases its not an eye problem at all...closing eyes is a symptom of something else. Solve THAT problem and the eye problem goes away too. At the top of this forum there's a post with a questionnaire...
Totally fine. I usually tried to teach my chams to take water from a hand held syringe. Most, but not all of them did. It wasn't that difficult and I was able to mix a med into the syringe water once in a while if necessary. I'd spray down the cage foliage as usual. Most of the time the cham...
Just about 100% certain this is a thermal burn. Classic location for one. The actual temperature directly under the basking light at the perch she sits on is too high. You will need to adjust your temps either by lowering the basking perches or raising the lamp higher off the top of the cage...
You may not be seeing him drink if his cage is full of foliage and lots of droplets available much of the time. That's how it should be. What is the range in humidity in his cage during the day/night? If it is correct he may not be drinking because he's hydrated enough. Some chams drink in...
Well, this is the justification for keeping BOTH species. The cham is the main herp desired...the beardie is the antidote to the cham. Substituting a dog for the beardie works too.
The true "cost" ends up being what you need to do to make it functional for a creature it wasn't designed to house. A, $80 bird cage that is larger than an $80 reptile enclosure could be a relatively good buy, but don't forget that you will need to modify it; may need to make a screen cover to...
Get RID of the black light. They don't "bask" at night. They also need darkness and a temperature drop at night. Where did you get your husbandry information? If someone recommended the black light they have no clue how to care for a chameleon. I'd suggest reading the husbandry articles located...
Not particularly (but I'm not a panther expert). There is a lot of variation in size, especially if his breeder was more interested in selecting for color, not overall size. His rostrals look nice, full tail, pretty boy! He may fill out a little more still.
Can't tell what plant this is from the picture. Take better photos of it or the plant to a nursery and ask. There is a list of cham-safe plants under the Resources tab. Veileds are known to take bites out of their plants...better safe than sorry!
Her lip/gum does look a bit swollen but the gum itself doesn't look inflamed. I'd have a vet take a closer look. You may well be able to catch an infection quite early and get ahead of it.
Not personally, but I can see why someone might. They move around a lot at night (when you would be in bed) and dust from dried frass could easily be stirred up and get airborne. You might be allergic to their dry food too. Again, it could be getting stirred up more at night. Try moving them or...
This needs attention sooner than later. Can the vet arrange someone to care for your cham while you are gone? Its already infected and will only get worse. At the minimum he could lose his toe...at the worst end up with a systemic infection he doesn't survive. He's in pain now and that will also...
Oh I'm still around, but because of my time zone almost everyone else here has already responded to thread questions by the time I see them. I don't end up commenting as much...unless of course all of you happen to be wrong and I'm right! :p
How were you imagining using this "spray"? Spraying it on your cham is pointless and could be harmful. Spraying it on the feeders isn't going to result in very much getting into your cham at any one time. Getting a properly dosed liquid calcium and administering it properly is going to get the...