Stefan,
Congrats on your new endeavor. I am sure Clea will be fine. She is a healthy and mature female, and I don't have any doubts in my mind you can pull this off. You have the dedication and resources to make this work out, as well as plenty of support from your local cham community. Don't...
I second Harry. Ive never had a retained clutch laid within a month after a female laying the first clutch. 1.5-2 months later is much more average. Unless she is just a monster female (90+gram female NOT gravid), then you need to be cutting back on her food intake. Even those girls wont usually...
I dug this for sale thread up. Josh of Lost Lake Chameleons posted this male for sale. I do not believe Josh produced the animal.
https://www.chameleonforums.com/pink-blue-ankaramy-x-11466/
The petroleum like nature of neosporin isn't helping the issue long term. Use a product called Tobramycin Opthalmic Solution. It is a antibiotic designed for use on eyes and is not "goopy". Some members also use Terramycin, but I wouldn't recommend it over Tobramycin.
Plenty of females left from this clutch. Many are roughly 4.5 months old. Some of the females range from 6-8inches total length, or 3-4.5 inches snout to vent length, and some of the larger girls are weighing in at 25-30 grams. Pricing remains the same. Check out my previous post for a photo of...
She looks ready to me, but she'll be the judge. If youve fed her a proper diet, and she is 150% health wise after laying that first clutch, I would show her to a male, and if she doesn't reject him, let her do her thing. But waiting would hurt either. She looks large and healthy.
:confused::confused::confused:
I raise neonates in cages right out of the egg. A 12x12x12 cage sounds perfect. Sound like a cool size too!
Also- Feed d.hydei and 1/8 inch crickets. To keep the tiny crickets from escaping in a screen cage, cut out the bottom of a deli cup and put some excelsior...
I dont think theres really an answer to your question.... It all depends on the female, feeding, temeratures... To many factors to really tell you how long you can put it off.
The pellets your dog got shot by appear to be .177 caliber, a standard caliber found most anywhere. Some of the more powerful pellet guns travel about 1200-1400fps, so if those pellets didn't penetrate so deep that they could be easily pulled out they were probably shot in the 800fps range...