Ok, he still isn't eating, an drinking very little, i syringe fed him some pedialite today because I'm worried. I've upgraded his cage with some live plants and shifted some fake ones farther u, and given him a 18" reptisun 5.0 over the crappy compacts. I washed the plants leaves with soapy...
man the more i read about chameleons, the more problematic, and hard to diagnose they seem to me. I've been battling my veiled not wanting to eat. I have taken all the advice given here on the forums, etc... as to not hijack this thread, I made this post to ask for a picture of your free range...
o.O looks like it will be awesome.
Silicone is a great sealant and adhesive. If you are making this out of like 1" thick melamine, which is like, high density particle board, with a finished, whit surface, make sure you PRE DRILL your holes, then use wood screws, PRE DRILL!
I assume you...
my girlfriend is a wildlife biologist and manages a rescue center for mammals, and local reptiles and amphibians.
She wanted me to ask if you guys think we should give him a B complex injection to stimulate appetite. As she specializes in native stuff. Also, pedialite orally??????
old repashy bug burger was 20% protein, the new mix is 13%. This should solve the die off.
Per a guy at frilleddragon.com who is feeding to his dubia colony.
I run one in my room, and sometimes on my chameleons cage, on really dry days just to boost humidity some. I can't see that it could be harmful in any way.
well the "spur" pictures you posted are pictures of his front feet. Those are just some weird lumps, maybe from metabolic bone disease, i dont know. Male spurs are on the REAR feet, in between the toes, on the heel, where a spur would be.
color and pattern wise it looks like a male, but I'm...
not really. I have been doing what I can. I sold a pc part on craiglist today and bought a reptisun 5.0 18" UVB and pit it in an old black light fixture I had. He's still really active and alert, between stopping to warm back up in his basking spot.
well, i did a little research into bug burger, along with asking some people on other forums, and I went ahead and ordered some 32oz of it.
Apparently the old bug burger was 20% calcium, and the new stuff is 13% calcium. The 20% was too high in calcium for dubia roaches, and was causing high...
Here's my 11 month old male New Guinea frilled neck lizard. He's very handleable. Though he doesn't hesitate to threat display in defense to just about anything, especially cameras. He's about 22 inches now. Hoping he doesn't stop til 26+
I've had him since he was a baby.
He was a little...