Farrell Children
New Member
Hello,
I hope you have time to help me. My Senegal Chameleon I brought home from the Reptile Expo is very ill. Today, after spray, I noticed she was not opening both eyes as she moved. She climbed to the top of her cage and hit her nose on the top.
After spending a few hours on this site I feel I have been greatly mis-informed/un-helped by three different local sources and I am very very new to chameleons. I told this to the seller and got a lot of information on how to construct my own cage from him. I don't think this was wise first off. He assured me chameleons were easy reptiles to own.
. I have naively found that is incorrect. I've only had a python. The issues are many. Please get back to me as swiftly as you can. Have not witnessed her eat or drink though 2 of 4 reptical-d3 dusted crickets are missing. Here is her info:
Chameleon Info:
• Your Chameleon - Senegal Cham, female, unsure of age (few months). About 3 inches long. Owned since 06/02/2012
• Handling – handled at reptile expo, drove her home and she was in the box for about 3 hours & constructed a temporary cage, I have handled her twice since she has been home.
• Feeding – So far, she seems to have eaten 2 of her crickets. That are in a opaque plastic container they can’t get out of. (so possibly 2 crickets in 6 days.) I plan to have 2-4 crickets in that system continually in her set up when she is on a regular schedule. Gut-loading with flukers high calcium cricket feed with D3 in the ingredients. I plan to feed the crickets appropriate veggies as well.
• Supplements – Rep-cal phosphorous free calcium with vit D3
• Watering – Spray bottle 2-3 times a day all over plant & some directly on her as lightly as I can. (was told two different things on spraying on her directly or not.)
• Fecal Description - very small, about the size of mouse droppings and greyish blackish color looks like bird poop
• History – captive born in WA by breeder
Cage Info:
• Cage Type - 4’ by 1.5’ cylinder constructed cage with mesh wire with holes a cm wide and long. Plastic plant plate on bottom and top. This is temporary now that things don’t seem to be well at all.
• Lighting – Red light heat incandescent bulb 50 watt Zilla brand in regular light dome that is non-reflective on the inside. 13W Repti Glo 5.0 compact in a reflective aluminum light dome (went and removed this after reading the dangers. She had a full 14 hours for each of the past two days with that. And now she’s not opening her eyes, was under stress from transition as well, dehydrated possibly) I will use tube UBV ASAP.
• Temperature – 70-72 in basking spot towards the upper section of cage. Only one thermometer.
• Humidity – Hygrometer is connected to thermometer at says it is at 55%. Only doing sprays at this time.
• Plants – one large arboricola to hide in, also made back out of brown paper to add secureness around back of enclosure.
• Placement - Located in office room. Low traffic. No vents, near a large window that doesn’t get much direct sunlight. Not near the wall heater. We have a gecko in same room on opposite wall. On a stand that is a 12” tall.
• Location – Western, WA close to Puget Sound.
Current Problem - Stress from transition, proper living space, Both eyes closed. Lethargic since day three after she explored her cage.
I want to take her to the reptile hospital so I don’t kill her. I don’t feel confident about caring for her at this delicate scary position she is in with all the conflicting info. Should I force feed her with powder and plastic animal syringe? She is skinny and sickly looking now. Should I take her into the vet immediately or will that worsen things?
I hope you have time to help me. My Senegal Chameleon I brought home from the Reptile Expo is very ill. Today, after spray, I noticed she was not opening both eyes as she moved. She climbed to the top of her cage and hit her nose on the top.
After spending a few hours on this site I feel I have been greatly mis-informed/un-helped by three different local sources and I am very very new to chameleons. I told this to the seller and got a lot of information on how to construct my own cage from him. I don't think this was wise first off. He assured me chameleons were easy reptiles to own.
Chameleon Info:
• Your Chameleon - Senegal Cham, female, unsure of age (few months). About 3 inches long. Owned since 06/02/2012
• Handling – handled at reptile expo, drove her home and she was in the box for about 3 hours & constructed a temporary cage, I have handled her twice since she has been home.
• Feeding – So far, she seems to have eaten 2 of her crickets. That are in a opaque plastic container they can’t get out of. (so possibly 2 crickets in 6 days.) I plan to have 2-4 crickets in that system continually in her set up when she is on a regular schedule. Gut-loading with flukers high calcium cricket feed with D3 in the ingredients. I plan to feed the crickets appropriate veggies as well.
• Supplements – Rep-cal phosphorous free calcium with vit D3
• Watering – Spray bottle 2-3 times a day all over plant & some directly on her as lightly as I can. (was told two different things on spraying on her directly or not.)
• Fecal Description - very small, about the size of mouse droppings and greyish blackish color looks like bird poop
• History – captive born in WA by breeder
Cage Info:
• Cage Type - 4’ by 1.5’ cylinder constructed cage with mesh wire with holes a cm wide and long. Plastic plant plate on bottom and top. This is temporary now that things don’t seem to be well at all.
• Lighting – Red light heat incandescent bulb 50 watt Zilla brand in regular light dome that is non-reflective on the inside. 13W Repti Glo 5.0 compact in a reflective aluminum light dome (went and removed this after reading the dangers. She had a full 14 hours for each of the past two days with that. And now she’s not opening her eyes, was under stress from transition as well, dehydrated possibly) I will use tube UBV ASAP.
• Temperature – 70-72 in basking spot towards the upper section of cage. Only one thermometer.
• Humidity – Hygrometer is connected to thermometer at says it is at 55%. Only doing sprays at this time.
• Plants – one large arboricola to hide in, also made back out of brown paper to add secureness around back of enclosure.
• Placement - Located in office room. Low traffic. No vents, near a large window that doesn’t get much direct sunlight. Not near the wall heater. We have a gecko in same room on opposite wall. On a stand that is a 12” tall.
• Location – Western, WA close to Puget Sound.
Current Problem - Stress from transition, proper living space, Both eyes closed. Lethargic since day three after she explored her cage.
I want to take her to the reptile hospital so I don’t kill her. I don’t feel confident about caring for her at this delicate scary position she is in with all the conflicting info. Should I force feed her with powder and plastic animal syringe? She is skinny and sickly looking now. Should I take her into the vet immediately or will that worsen things?