Hello i have a adult female veiled that gets bored in her cage all the time. I let her roam around my room when I'm home but school is about to start and I was thinking i could redo her cage once a month to spice things up for her. Is it a good idea or should I leave it the same. Thank you
Thats awesome i have a shorkie (shih tzu, yorkie mix) who would gladly take my chameleon as a tasty snack he could stash under my bed for later. But he might have trouble getting her because she is an extremely territorial female veiled. (She's pretty nice to me though depending on the day)
Thank you so much i think I might try Phoenix worms even though they turn into flys. My parents wont notice as long as they don't look like house flies.
Hello, I am wondering if there are any easy to raise feeders for my veiled. I already raise crickets and mealworms but lately she doesn't go for them but would gladly take a house fly. I'm 13 and my parents say no roaches or flys in the house so that rules out houseflies and Dubai roaches...
Hello, I have a female veiled chameleon and i am thinking about getting another chameleon. I am not interested in breeding veileds and was wondering if anyone knew a friendlier species.
Hello, I have a gravied female veiled chameleon and was wondering if I could put boiled egg shells in her food dish to help her get more calcium. I am also feeding her grasshoppers and cicadas for extra nutrients.
You can cross breed species but there is a much lower chance of the eggs getting fertilized and with some species it is impossible. Not sure about those two though
Fruit flies should only be fed to very small chameleons (3in in length) but after they get larger than that they should be moved to a larger food source like crickets, mealworms, super worms, and Dubai roaches. All are pretty easy to breed except for super worms.
I have veiled chameleons but I am familiar with the Jackson's chameleon too. Male Jackson's chameleons should not be kep together because it stresses them out too much. The smaller one is intimidated by the larger male and hides from him in the upper and lower parts of the cage. Stress is...