Out of that list, I only feed superworms. They are the easiest (after crickets) to come by, easy to keep alive, etc. Some chams can become addicted to them (wont eat anything else) but if they get hungry enough they will and will switch back over. Its just a matter of having tough love for them...
haha I have, and it's totally true!! The superworms I get must be treated though, because I can never get them to pupate!! I was going to breed them, but they die just before they'd normally start to transform! :(
Day I brought him home:
A few days after settling into his enclosure:
(Which I have changed so many times since starting, but hey, I learn!!)
First shed:
First deck trip (to an outdoor enclosure) for some real sun:
Few days ago:
He was stressed after being relocated for cleaning his...
I have a bioactive Viv already set up and thriving, it just needs its primary inhabitants! Already own a veiled, and have/had both a newt and several firebellied toads successfully in a bioactive (of course in separate enclosures).
Not sure about some of the sources I've found on my own, so I...
Okay I have to be the only person on this earth that has had trouble breeding these damn things! I've read about breeding crickets and tried a bunch of different "set ups" and still no pinheads!! :mad: I'm sick of running to the store every few days! None of them are dying on me... but why...
I was just wondering this myself a few days ago, but I think it's still making the temperature variation within the cage - so they can regulate, otherwise they'd be stuck at one temperature because the UVB doesnt give off much? Thats my guess anyways, but I'm interested to see what others say...
Okay, someone on a facebook forum made me paranoid... it IS okay to feed the moths to the chams right?? I thought it was... and then someone said it wasn't... and now I'm unsure... But it seems like if you can feed the worm, you should be able to feed the moth... and it would be a good challenge...