Elizadolots
New Member
check it out..Dont worry, not my video. Just something i found a long time ago.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OrcAJzJzRGY
It would have been more spectacular if the fish had been in a pond or bowl...but still...interesting.
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check it out..Dont worry, not my video. Just something i found a long time ago.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OrcAJzJzRGY
I think the safer bet is to not regurgitate what you hear/read on the forums but to link to it instead. Unless you are very confident in what you know, no mater how you learned it, point people to the information and let them decide for themselves.
The vet example is a bad one because vets refer, research, and read material that is a bit more scholarly than the internet forums where a lot of the information is just regurgitated stuff.
Yes! The problem with regurgitating info you read on here is that you have no idea how many times this info has been repeated without other experience. If I came in here one day posting about how much my chams love goldfish and then other people read it and tell more people that chams love goldfish, we might end up with a forum full of people with dead chams. Always question your source and try to limit your posting to what you only have actual knowledge about or experience with.
I only regard what experience keepers have said. I also talk to experienced reptile keepers and veterinarians in my area, not just on here. So IMHO a pinkie once every one to two months is okay. They asked for opinions, so there is mine.
Yes, and other very experienced keepers are noting that your opinion, which is based on a single feeding in a single chameleon with a long history of health issues and unnamed "experts", should probably be taken as a grain of salt.
Chris
Then the original poster can ignore my opinion. But as you should know, a pinkies bones are barely developed so basically they are just fatty treats. That is all I suggested them as, treats.
If any, I would say that pinkies are excellent source of Retinol. (not for fat or calcium)...and to say, pinky is just a glob of fat is a bit overstatement, imho.
Is it necessary to feed your cham pinky once a month? probably, not... and, it is also in my opinion that the feeding frequency might be too much for a chameleon.
Do realize: feeding it too often can raise a lot of health problem knowing how much protein and Retinol your chameleon take from that feeder.
I do not see problems feeding it once in every blue moon.
Then again... your chameleon will be completely fine, even if he never eat a pinky in his life, provided that you take care of him well.
THIS is a link to a post by a moderator on this board, from this forum made in January of this year:
In it, he/she says:
I'm not advocating any position on this..my chameleons are tiny and would almost certainly hide on the other side of their cages if such a thing were presented, but it's obvious that contradictory information has been presented by people in "authority" positions on this issue....
It seems....I don't know....odd?... for a poster to be condemned for taking the same position a moderator has taken recently.
The only time I ever fed a pinky to a chameleon (Parson's) was about 20 years ago. My vet and I decided to try it because the Parson's was being hand fed (long story...nannizziopsis vreisii...damaged knee...broken tail as a result...etc.) for a time and it took "forever" to get enough insects in it to build it back up. Neither of us had had much experience with chameleons then. We gave it one every 5 or 6 days with insects in between. It threw them all up one day...none of them showed any signs of being digested...but the insects were. I never fed a chameleon a pinky again....and I likely never will.
It seems that a lot of the problem comes if you start feeding them to animals that are otherwise unhealthy. For animals that are healthy, I don't think it is bad in moderation but I wouldn't recommend it regularly. Chameleons will eat vertebrates in the wild if they can find them but generally they are healthy animals that have a very balanced diet. In captivity we tend to have fat animals that have had histories of hydration issues (thus kidney damage) and then we start giving them large amounts of vertebrate prey items and it can exacerbate other problems.
Chris
THIS is a link to a post by a moderator on this board, from this forum made in January of this year:
In it, he/she says:
I'm not advocating any position on this..my chameleons are tiny and would almost certainly hide on the other side of their cages if such a thing were presented, but it's obvious that contradictory information has been presented by people in "authority" positions on this issue....
It seems....I don't know....odd?... for a poster to be condemned for taking the same position a moderator has taken recently.