JessicaBay
New Member
i read online that veild chameleons are more aggressive than other breeds... is this true? who should i trust?
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I think if you take a chameleon of any kind and stick it in a cage and put it in an out of the way place where it never sees people and you never interact with it then the chances are you might have a very aggressive chameleon.
I think if you take a chameleon of any kind and stick it in a cage and put it in an out of the way place where it never sees people and you never interact with it then the chances are you might have a very aggressive chameleon.
HOWEVER that being said, a calm, non-aggressive Veiled chameleon is the exception rather than the rule. Even males can be quite calm, hand feed, and tolerate handling well until they are 6-8 months old. After that, most Veileds become aggressive. Most will hiss and headbutt, and some will bite. Hardly any of them will respond well to hand feeding or handling.
With Veiled chameleons, we as keepers are lucky that they do not come with talons and sharper teeth.
No wonder why he died hes not a bearded dragon sirI am blown away... I had a male Veiled from his 4th week until he was 1.5 yrs old and he loved being with us. He traveled with us, went to the store, outdoors in the summer and just hung on us, with us or near us, in the winter.
He fell badly, we think; we found him yellow & dying, suddenly, in the bottom of his crate on 5/11... We were blessed to be holding him when he died.
He ALWAYS turned beautiful colors in our hands, they were calming, light, easy greens & teals.....
Lived without & cried about Mozart for 4 weeks, but we just got Phi, another baby boy Veiled on 6/11. Life is worth living again! Phi seems OK with hanging... for very short periods because he is so young, but we want him to be really used to us, like Mozart was.
Mozart did hiss and carry on when we first started handling him, but he'd been brusquely handled by the saleswoman who packaged him for travel home when I bought him. She just reached in and grabbed him and quickly thrust him in a two cup container, almost like she was afraid he'd bite, so it made sense to me that he hated hands...
We were patient with him and bought him out of his crate a few times daily, and he got to where he'd walk onto our hands, even if he was sleeping (I loved him so much!). Miss him very much daily, but now we look to Phi with hope.
My Veiled was perfect...