I wrap the sides and back of my indoor screen cages, to keep the water and humidity in. I use a blue tarp material that kinda has a waxy coating. Also keeps the chams from seeing one another, so cuts down on visual stress.
Mr. Faly has been living outdoors for a few weeks now. He really blends in good and can be hard to find at times. In the photo he's getting ready for bed on the perch he seems to perfer.
14 days in fridge minimum. Couple days will not work. If you have a incubator you can place inside at 80 and add a cup of water inside to up humidity. Keep eggs dry.
Reading this tread just reminded me that my girlfriend used my spring mix of greens and lettuces for a salad for everyone (people) Monday. Time to hit the produce dept. again.
Picture of setup, and cham would be useful. Is he black all over? or just one side or the other? Does he hang out under the basking light? or does he tend to hide in a corner near back of cage? He's most likely still getting use to his new home. If he's eating and active, I would be patient...
Do you, or are you keeping a male panther as well? If she can see a male near by the dark color would be stay away colors. I've had females with retained sperm act similarily shortly after laying a clutch. If no male present, There might be something else in visual sight bugging her.
I don't think so. 1 to 2 week old crickets work best. Really depends on size of babies at hatch. A 9 month old hatched baby is usually alot bigger than a early 6,7,8 month old hatch.
On top of her? or away from her on top on cage? If waterery tint can just be normal bodily fluids from the act. Soild blood would be a issue. Picture would helpful. Mating is not always a smooth thing.