Okay, so this is my first time getting a chameleon been researching a whole lot. One of my questions is it difficult to own a baby veil then a juvenile?
Yes, but is it just a little difficult so first time chameleons owners can own a baby. Or is it wayyyy more difficult where it should be done by experienced owners.
One of the issues is that if you buy a very young one there is a mortality rate...some if them just don't make it for no apparent reason. They dehydrate quicker because of their small size and you need to have your husbandry right. I would advise you don't get one under 3 months for a first one....and get a male so you don't have to deal with reproductive issues.
Okay I am planning on getting a male and I have 3 options buy a juvenile veiled chameleon for 135$ including 50$ shipping fee, or buy a baby veiled chameleon for 39.99$ including 3.99, and lastly I could buy from a place for 40$, but has a cage of 5 juvenile veiled chameleons and does not get dusted food, but they do have a fully grown Jackson and panther chameleon, so they are doing something right!
Can't tell you what is the best option of the ones you listed. Are you sure the one store grew the Jacksons and veiled??
I would advise you to look for a reputable breeder and get one from them.
I would supplement with d3 twice a month, once a month multivitamin, and the rest without d3. I need to know more about gutloading, but I think I should gutload with orange slices, lettuce and, shredded carrots. For a heat bulb I heard you should use a regular incandescent bulb, and I have a reptisun 5.0 strip bulb for uvb. I'm pretty sure you increase the temp every month, so start out with 80 degrees for a baby. You should spray at least 2 times a day about 5 minutes each.
You said..." I need to know more about gutloading, but I think I should gutload with orange slices, lettuce and, shredded carrots"...lettuce is only good for moisture. You can use dandelion greens, kale, endive, escarole, squash, zucchini, sweet potato, sweet red pepper, a small amount of fruit such as berries, pears, apples, melon.. You said..." For a heat bulb I heard you should use a regular incandescent bulb, and I have a reptisun 5.0 strip bulb for uvb"...that's what I use..You said..." I'm pretty sure you increase the temp every month, so start out with 80 degrees for a baby"...low 80's F for a hatchling and adult female if you don't want her to produce large clutches. Mid 80's for an adult male is fine.. You said..."You should spray at least 2 times a day about 5 minutes each" ...I would also use a dripper.
In regards to breeder recommendations, I bought my cham from FLChams. Got a very healthy and active 4 month old male veiled. He was shipped over night and securely packaged. He is now about 11 months old and I couldn't be happier. Well worth the price for what you get.