Veiledcham920
New Member
Hello, I am a new member and love all of the great advice and fun photos on here! My family and I have recently became owners of a veiled chameleon. Someone my husband knows gave him her 1 1/2 year old male, veiled chameleon. There was no warning, no preparation, nothing! So we pretty much have been crash coursing in chameleon care. We really enjoy him so I want to make sure he’s as comfortable as can be! Here is Yoshi’s info...
Your Chameleon - 1 1/2 year old, veiled male chameleon. We’ve had him 2 months.
Cage Info:
Current Problem - Biggest problem I am concerned about are the spikes on his back. They were darker since we got him but now I’m afraid he has been burned as they are grey and crispy looking. Also curious if some of the greyer spots on his head heat burns. The light I am using, is there a suggested distance I should keep it??? Right now it’s about 8 inches from his lizard lounger.
Suggestions on humidity?? Is a humidifier ok? I was told they were desert animals and don’t need to much humidity in the first place so that’s where I could use some insight. He also has dry shedding skin that has not fallen off especially by the darker spikes along his spine. Wondering if that’s related with the humidity??
I will attach pics.
Your Chameleon - 1 1/2 year old, veiled male chameleon. We’ve had him 2 months.
- Handling - He has active times through out the afternoon where he wants to come out of his cage to roam and will climb right onto my hand and hang out for a bit.
- Feeding - Large crickets, 6 in the morning and 6 in the evening. Gut load with untreated grass, carrots, spinach and random raw vegetables I’ll throw in as well.
- Supplements - Zoo med repti-calcium with D3. I sprinkle morning crickets every other day.
- Watering - Plant dripper, mist plants every morning same time I feed crickets.
- Fecal Description - Brown stiff poop with white urate.
- History - He came from someone that bred chams, she was very clear to my husband that he was very “domesticated” and used to living in a home and didn’t even need an enclosure. He was one of her more aggressive males which is why she couldn’t keep him.
Cage Info:
- Cage Type - Using an old wire cage I use to use for my bird. It’s 18x18x36. Looking to him getting an extra large size as he seems to be very active during the day and needs more space.
- Lighting - Solar brite, R40 white mercury vapor, a uva/uvb and heat lamp in one light. We run it 12 hours a day. Curious if this could be to hot or how far away should the basking spot be from this??
- Temperature - Don’t have a thermometer at the moment but when we first set up his enclosure the basking spot was around 80 degrees. He’s in our home so night temp in our home gets to about 70.
- Humidity - Not sure what humidity is in the enclosure I don’t have anything to check. He did shed some skin and there are still some patches not coming off so I figured he need more humidity. I placed a cool mist humidifier near the enclosure I run on low all day.
- Plants - I have a croton, birds nest fern and pothos plant in the enclosure. Outside of enclosure there are a few more live plants as well as a corn stalk tree he occasionally climbs on.
- Placement - Located in corner of the living room, no vents near by, near a window but does not get direct sun.
- Location - Michigan
Current Problem - Biggest problem I am concerned about are the spikes on his back. They were darker since we got him but now I’m afraid he has been burned as they are grey and crispy looking. Also curious if some of the greyer spots on his head heat burns. The light I am using, is there a suggested distance I should keep it??? Right now it’s about 8 inches from his lizard lounger.
Suggestions on humidity?? Is a humidifier ok? I was told they were desert animals and don’t need to much humidity in the first place so that’s where I could use some insight. He also has dry shedding skin that has not fallen off especially by the darker spikes along his spine. Wondering if that’s related with the humidity??
I will attach pics.
Attachments
-
F9A7BCFC-A145-4448-A7B7-33839BDECCBC.jpeg203 KB · Views: 163
-
45391E83-4C62-44D2-827A-C2527937A967.jpeg253.1 KB · Views: 176
-
23F219D7-0437-47D9-A86A-53DF9E21EB46.jpeg211.1 KB · Views: 175
-
18CB5839-8A5D-4CE4-AACD-6D1FDD76BA98.jpeg156.8 KB · Views: 208
-
4012919B-C5E8-4098-8B02-1E7A3D0EB538.jpeg116.1 KB · Views: 174