Carlton
Chameleon Enthusiast
Before i got my chameleon everything I read said they were super hard to take care of and ONLY for people very experienced in keeping reptiles. Never had any at that point, but all i really wanted was a chameleon!
So i read, a lot. Got everything I needed. and I think my chameleons are doing fine.
I think they're only "Difficult" because they require quite a bit of money put in to them, time, attentiveness, and caring. But once you've got all that it's not very hard at all.
Side note: Seeing all the parson's on here is making me jealous, too. I want one. But living in BC we can't get roaches, which might make them harder to care for. (any insight on keeping parsons without roaches is more than welcome)
After keeping chams and other exotics, the one thing I would say about their care is that they will appeal to keepers who are detail oriented, dedicated to DAILY focused attention, understanding of large live potted plants and their care, understanding of feeder insect care, a creative problem solving person who is always thinking about ways to create a room or greenhouse-sized copy of the cham's wild habitat...the sunlight, the humidity, the 3 dimensional living space, its nutrition and prey animal care. Chams won't thrive on neglect or a casual attitude. A good cham keeper does not expect their cham to adjust to human life, rather the other way around. I have not kept a Parsoni and don't really look to (now a beautiful little bifidus or willsii is a different matter!), but other than their need for space, correct hydration, the best variety of feeders, winter torpor and preparing them for it (setting them up nutritionally for torpor and understanding their different needs during it) I don't think they would be uniquely difficult. But again, I've handled lots of chams; tempermental or not, sick or healthy, so take that general level of experience for granted. I am also not prepared to breed chams and feel that taking on a species like this should be done with responsible "production" of future generations in mind.
Oh, and don't forget, this is a longer lived species than most. You'll need to be dedicated for possibly 15 to 20 years if all goes well! That alone is a huge commitment most people can't make.
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