All of my chameleons hand feed, except my WC melleri – he’s gone off of hand feeding since I moved his cage. Never was really prone to much hand feeding, for some reason.
Some of my veileds aren’t doing it yet, but they don’t count, cause they’re holdbacks for sale, and I don’t really try.
The keys:
1) nobody else in the room, no dogs, nothing. No distractions, threats, etc. nothing unfamiliar.
2) larger prey item. Adult crickets are all of my chameleons’ favorite food. They prefer them to anything. That’s what I use most of the time, though my melleri seem to also have a thing for big roaches. Big items get their attention, and most importantly of all, cover your fingertips – don’t’ want them associating fingernails with food. You don’t.
3) Stand in front, with the food in between you and them. They don’t like having you out of their site. When the food is in between you and them, they can focus their eyes forward on the food, and still keep you (the threat) in view. If you try to feed them to the side or the back, they’ll constantly want to keep that eye on you – and they have to move it to feed. Makes it hard, though trusting chameleons don’t mind a bit.
4) Height. It helps if they are higher than you – crouch.
5) Movement – they cannot resist a bug if it’s trying to get away. Hold the insect to a leaf or branch and let it move. Just hold it, but let it try to walk on the leaf or stick or whatever – that movement (natural movement, not simply flailing legs) really gets their attention.
6) The best way to get timid animals to hand feed is to hide you fingers behind something. Do like in step 5, but hide your hand behind something – like the side of the cage. Allow the cricket to be seen, but not your hand. Perhaps the easiest way is to hold an insect on the top of a broad leaf. Use the leaf to hide your hand, and just allow the chameleon to see the bug.
7) Get deremensis. Every single deremensis I have ever owned ate from my hand the moment I removed them from the boxes. Even the juveniles. The last ones I got were the best – I opened the canvas bag, removed the deremensis, and within 2 seconds, offered crickets – both male and female ate them – while I was holding them. They just don’t seem to worry.
- My CB melleri, Ardi, is so used to me, and people in general, that he will always hand feed. I've used him at many events where he was surrounded by hundreds of people, adults and pointing, jumping kids, and he never fails to eat. I do a presentation with him, and he has absolutly no issues with eating from a stranger's hand. Kids love it.
I really need to get this on video. I hold Ardi in one hand, and a kid holds out an insect - he'll eat it every time. usually, before I show him, I just hold a cricket near the tree he's in, an dlet him reveal himself - people don't see him until he moves.