congrats dude your one step down and a few more to go , i would personally use the smaller cage because she been in it for the last little bit so shes used to it , and also the smaller the floor space the better so she only sees the bucket of dirt as her ground floor and cant get down beside it...
Ok i wasnt the only one who read that lol
but here yea go Sancho heres the link to raising 69 baby vieleds by Juli it will show you the cost of having baby veileds around
https://www.chameleonforums.com/cost-raising-69-baby-18467/
sorry man but your not going to make any extra money selling veiled chameleons , your going to either break even of what you have spent or you loose money , there is no money making in veileds at all , just experience gained is all your going to get, sorry im not tryin to burst your bubble or be...
i use a see through bin for my lay bins so i know where the eggs are , and then i dig around them and take pretty much 3/4 of the dirt or sand out with my hands and then i start to brush away the sand or dirt with a paint brush i just use a 2 1/2 inch brush and it works fine and i just slowly...
it would be pretty hard to tell the difference from each other at a young age but by 6 months of age you could tell ,in males or females of the C calcarifer there casque doesnt get any bigger then 2 inches where as the C calyptratus casque gets 3 to 4 inches tall , to forsure tell is to wait...
i was told by the guy who got the European shipment in that they were the smaller casque veileds C calcarifer and all 6 females that came in were massive and iv never seen another female veiled that big again and they had the tinest of casques iv ever seen also and havent seen that around either...
there is actually 2 kinds of veiled chameleon , one has a bigger casque living in the bottom of the mountians of yemen, closer to the desert so they need to store water in there casque because its not redily availible all the time or some say its a heat dissapation and there scientific name is C...
i love how Aarons expresses himself saying he doesnt like this kinds of animal and its not for him because its not very rewarding for him and then you have the attackers right away on him just going at his troat ,saying oh this offended me , WHAT PART OFFENDED! it doesnt have anything about you...
try taking her out of her enclosure and introducing her into the males cage i had this problem also the female was a nice peachy salmon colour and when i tried to introduce the male she would go gravid colours but that all changed when i introduced the female to the male so try different things...
sorry forgot , female veiled chameleons can lay a clutch of eggs anywheres from 80-120 days apart and lay 20-100 eggs 40-60 is the average for a female veiled , there populators of there species thats there job to make as many babies as possible , when i first started out breeding my female...
sorry to hear that your fella died there on you , chameleons hide there sickness so well that its almost to late at times to help them , my first male veiled i had died of a hemipenal prolapse and he didnt make it to next mourning for his vet check up
Nicodemayo i agree with you its deff not 4-5 months old if it is then it was malnurished and neglected , it looks around the 2month range maybe even 2.5 months at the most