My feedback will be in bold and I’ll probably split this into two parts.
Awe thank you! She’s very pretty!! I appreciate the help as well, thank you again for that. She has been moving a lot around her enclosure!!
She is probably receptive - all dressed up and looking for a boy. More than recently she’s been hanging around sometimes in the bottom section.
This is probably related to being receptive, but the sooner she has a lay bin, the better and less is left to guessing.Here’s my husbandry!
Your Chameleon: Veiled chameleon, female, I would say she's around 7-8 months? My sister had gotten her at petsmart, I'd assume she was around 3 months old when we've recieved her. She's been with me since september of last year.
Age is probably correct or close enough.
Handling: I've only handled her four times. Once a month.
Even though our veiled friends may never stop being sassy, it is still always good to work on building and maintaining trust with her. https://www.chameleonforums.com/blogs/building-trust-with-your-chameleon.2396/ It’s also good to become comfortable with handling her. It can be hard to do at first, especially if she’s extra sassy or bitey.
Feeding: Everyday I've been feeding her 8-10 dubia roaches/crickets, with one day of fasting. With two medium hornworms as a treat bug daily when I do get hornworms, and 1 superworm a week. With my dubias/crickets I gutload them with carrots and letucce a day before the feeding, but I sometimes don't gutload them.
This is a lot to feed her and the chances of her producing a large clutch of eggs is high. However, I’m not so sure about cutting her food back so drastically at this point in her reproductive cycle. I would say to at least reduce her to about 5-6 feeders at one time, including treats in that number. Unless @kinyonga advises differently…she knows so very much more than I. After she has successfully laid her eggs, you’ll then feed her well for a couple of days and then start her on a reduced feeding regimen of 3-4 feeders, 3 days a week plus treats. Basically, the more they eat the more eggs they’ll produce.
You can improve what you’re feeding your bugs. We want them to be well fed and healthy, so that they will be more nutritious. I don’t gut load in the true sense, but I do keep my bugs with healthy food at all times. You could also add a bit more variety of feeders. Crickets and roaches are great staples, but you could also add in some silkworms (those are great for hand feeding) and bsfl. Both of those, if you let them pupate add further variety. Adding some graphics below to guide you. *avoid spinach and kale
Supplements: For around a month or two I've been using the Repashy Calcium Plus for every feedng, but I didn't realize it wasn't the LoD version. So, now I've been using the Repashy LoD for every feeding.
Eesh!
You need to stop using that immediately! I’m surprised she doesn’t have any edema or any issues. Repashy supplements are great, but they contain the fat soluble type of Vitamin A (preformed) and of course, vitamin D3, which is also fat soluble. Fat soluble vitamins are not so quickly metabolized and excreted by the body, so they can build up to toxic levels if overdone. We use those very carefully…just for one feeding every other week (or twice a month if you prefer) is when to use the LoD. For all other feedings, you need to be using a phosphorus-free calcium without D3, like Repashy Supercal NoD. I’m going to say to not use the LoD for at least a good 2-3 weeks to let her eliminate some out of her system.
Watering: I mist her enclosure at 7am when her lights come on and mist again at 9pm for around 1 minute.
Ok…maybe increase the duration to 2 minutes to give time for her drinking response to be triggered. I also have a dripper that I recently stopped using since she runs away from it and goes to the bottom of her enclosure.
Misting twice a day is generally enough, but if her urates are dark, you could use a dripper for 15-20 minutes per afternoon. Throughout 12am-7am I have a fogger that comes on as well.
Are your night temps consistently and reliably always below at least 68?
Fecal Description: I'm not completely sure how much she does go, but i'll say once every 4-2 days? Her urate is white and sometimes runny due to the hornworms, v juicy lol.
It’s always a good idea to have a fecal parasite check. You’ll need a vet visit in order to do that though.
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