Hi! I might just be new parent stressing but I need someone to correct me or ease my mind
This is day 2 with this lil guy, think heās supposed to a 2 month-old veiled chameleon. Heās only eaten 1 cricket so far but I kinda expected that, and hasnāt drank water yet but Iāve misted him.
Iām a lil worried that he woke up a little gray today and when I turned on his basking light heās stayed there the whole time. Pretty sure he went darker gray while under it. He went around under the light moving slowly but stayed in that area most the day. He was exploring the top part of the enclosure before lights were on so he wasnāt moving that slow the whole day.
And now heās back to green. (Itās 1 hour difference between images but heās been under the light most of the day) Is this normal?
His basking light is right on top of the cage but I have a stand if it needs to be adjusted. Itās a 75W lightbulb.
Awwā¦little cutie! Yes, itās a normal coloring for a veiled. Usually, when they are bright, they are fired up or asleep. Their normal relaxed colors can be a bit on the greyer side, especially for boys. I have to ask - are you positive you have a boy? Do you see some prominent nubs (tarsal spurs) on his back feet?
I also have to comment on his temp. 85F is much too hot for a little one. He would do best with daytime basing temps of high 70ās and no higher than 80F. Depending on your ambient house temps, he may not even need a basking light just yet.
Of course, Iām worse than a mother hen and since youāre here with your cutie patootie, Iād like to make sure you have everything right for him. Would you mind posting some pics of his entire enclosure?
Awwā¦little cutie! Yes, itās a normal coloring for a veiled. Usually, when they are bright, they are fired up or asleep. Their normal relaxed colors can be a bit on the greyer side, especially for boys. I have to ask - are you positive you have a boy? Do you see some prominent nubs (tarsal spurs) on his back feet?
I also have to comment on his temp. 85F is much too hot for a little one. He would do best with daytime basing temps of high 70ās and no higher than 80F. Depending on your ambient house temps, he may not even need a basking light just yet.
Of course, Iām worse than a mother hen and since youāre here with your cutie patootie, Iād like to make sure you have everything right for him. Would you mind posting some pics of his entire enclosure?
Okay Iāll be sure to fix the basking light on the stand for tomorrow! Was wondering if he was cold since he wouldnāt move from there.
I didnāt think to see if he is or not a boy Think I see a little spur but could be wrong.
This is how the enclosure looks right now, it looks a little bare bc I had to take out the huge hibiscus plant I had for him bc it had bugs eating the leaves (thankfully it doesnāt look like they left the plant they came in) Right now heās got a young money tree and a few pothos plants and one fake plant (the one under the basking light side bc I didnāt want a real one to burn under it) while we wait for a new hibiscus.
I do see a little spur, so I believe you do have a cute little boy. I do see some needed changes in his enclosure. The first is to move the uvb light to above his basking branch. It does have a relatively narrow band where itās at peak levels and then drops off very quickly. Provided your uvb is a T5 and youāve got either an Arcadia 6% or ReptiSun 5.0, you want a distance of 8-9ā between basking branch and your lights. Since little ones like to screen walk upside down on the top, they are at high risk for burns. To help prevent burns, you want to elevate your lights above the screen by a few inches. Itās only until heās too heavy to walk upside down, so things like wire baskets from the dollar store are perfect to rest lights on.
While itās difficult to truly determine size, it does appear that you have a smaller enclosure. While it may be suitable now while heās itty bitty, he is going to be a big guy before you know it and be needing much more space. The minimum size for adults is 2x2x4ā (like a ReptiBreeze XL). To get on my soap box for a minute, if you can go even bigger than that, do so. Iām very fortunate to be able to give each of my chams a double wide and itās wonderful seeing them use the space. Pic below of the size difference between the XL and Cham kit ReptiBreeze (I think is 16x30ā). Yes, that was when I was starting out, learning and making changes. The black cross pieces are Dragon Ledges, which help immensely in hanging branches and plants. https://dragonstrand.com/dragon-ledges/ Iāve lately been using garden trellis and it works almost as good. The whole idea is to use the frame of the enclosure to bear the weight.
Iām also adding a couple of pics of how I set up (for a panther) well after having learned the basics. One is a single wide with Dragon Ledges. I used a small stack of empty plant pots flipped over to elevate some plants sitting on the floor. I like natural branches best and my neighbors are getting used to me scavenging there oak tree trimmings. The other was the start of setting up the framework for branches using trellis.
With our veiled friends, we want to use only safe clean plants as they can and will nibble them. Pothos is your new bff. I hang my fake plants on the outside of the door to give my chams a bit of privacy from me. The mossy vine is also a hazard. Hibiscus is well loved by veileds and most plant eating reptiles, but it does have the tendency to bring in bugs (usually ants, but also nasty pests). Plus, they do need a very strong plant light. Of course a plant light is great for all plants, but common houseplants are ok without one.
General advice - you want to give your guy lots of branches and vines to travel on and of varied diameters to fully exercise those little mitten muscles. Plenty of plant cover to take shade and hide in and drink from. Give a variety of properly sized and well cared for feeders. Right now, being so young he should be getting as much as he can eat in a 15-20 minute period, twice a day. When heās about 3+ months old, drop to once a day. Around 4+ months, start counting feeders and give about 15-20 daily. Every month reduce a bit so by the time heās around a year old, heās getting 3-4 feeders, every other day, or even 3 days a week. For supplements, lightly dust every feeding with a phosphorus free calcium without D3. At one feeding every other week, you want to instead use a combo multivitamin/D3 - Repashy calcium Plus LoD or ReptiVite with D3 are recommended.
Do ask whatever questions you may haveā¦is a great way to learn.
Iām just curious what part of Florida youāre in. Iām in Brevard.