What are the various lights for your free range? The upper ones look too distant to provide viable warmth or UVB saturation. That's a great looking ficus.
Trick, do you have a reference for safe butterflies and moths? Is there a problem w/what plants from which they may feed? I have loads of cicadas but I don't touch them as they are sapsucking oleanders, plus they'd be too large for Chamille, I think.
I have two dwarf scheffleras, a small pothos, 2 croton, a draceana, and a couple of seedling basil volunteering in the lay bin. Still looking for a variegated ficus.
I'm using an old plastic pot that's 13.5" across and 12" deep, a 7.5 gallon I think. Chamille is 4-6 (if I've properly interpreted the receptive/gravid timelines) weeks away from needing it as she started sporting her man-hunting dressage in early November.
If weather permits, you could take him outside for some supervised sun time to keep up w/the vit D need. That's what I'm doing w/Chamille since she's come in for the winter, when I can coax her onto my hand (even though I have a UVB 4' tube).
That zoo-med is tempting ... I need a new outdoor cage and I'm not sure I could make one for that.
http://www.drsfostersmith.com/reptile-supplies/sale-center/ps/c/6016/20030
FWIW, I'm using superload. When comparing the ingredients of the two, it 'spoke' to me louder (sorry to go all scientific analysis on you), though I love the 'bug burger' name. Looking forward to opinions from the more enlightened ones here.
That looks awesome ... love the lichen. A dwarf schefflera or ficus in the right front corner would give your new panther some cover and utilize the space.
Have you checked for local nurseries for plants? ... florist, grocery store?
Also, perhaps you could leave a small serving a cricket food in the cage so they are less likely to munch on a sleeping cham, as well as keep them gutloaded.
I break the back legs of my crickets so they can't launch out of a cup.
:ROFLMAO:After I've dust them, they remind me of that movie w/Woody Harrelson.:ROFLMAO: