Eric Adrignola
Avid Member
I have been meaning to post these pics together for years.
When I was going away to Raleigh in February of 2007 for training for 3 weeks, I changed the lighting on my melleri cages. I went from 100W bulbs to 90W halogens. To compensate for the increased heat, I raised the bulbs off the cages quite a bit. I thought they were safely away from the melleri.
I was wrong. My WC didn't get burned badly, just on his knees a bit. But Ardi got cooked. The door to the basement was left open, and the room they were in went down to the low 4's upper 30's at night. The temps were in the 50's and 60's during the day - except near the lights. With their internal temperature still low, due to the cold air temps, the animals did not feel the need to move form the basking area. They sat there all day, every day, for about two weeks(I came home one weekend and fixed it).
The skin simply turned whitish. Stayed that way for months until it started to die and dry out. Not just skin, but flesh and bone. During the whole time, Ardi behaved as if not a thing was wrong. He never showed any sign of being in pain. I applied silvadine cream to all burns, and no infection ever took hold. The damaged area did not fully fall off until nearly a year later. Since then, some skin has began to grow back.
This is a pic of him before the burn.
This is a pic of him about 4 months AFTER the burn.
Here is him today. Note how much of his dorsal crest was lost.
Here is Ardi next to one of the CH melleri. He seems to be protecting him from the evil camera...
When I was going away to Raleigh in February of 2007 for training for 3 weeks, I changed the lighting on my melleri cages. I went from 100W bulbs to 90W halogens. To compensate for the increased heat, I raised the bulbs off the cages quite a bit. I thought they were safely away from the melleri.
I was wrong. My WC didn't get burned badly, just on his knees a bit. But Ardi got cooked. The door to the basement was left open, and the room they were in went down to the low 4's upper 30's at night. The temps were in the 50's and 60's during the day - except near the lights. With their internal temperature still low, due to the cold air temps, the animals did not feel the need to move form the basking area. They sat there all day, every day, for about two weeks(I came home one weekend and fixed it).
The skin simply turned whitish. Stayed that way for months until it started to die and dry out. Not just skin, but flesh and bone. During the whole time, Ardi behaved as if not a thing was wrong. He never showed any sign of being in pain. I applied silvadine cream to all burns, and no infection ever took hold. The damaged area did not fully fall off until nearly a year later. Since then, some skin has began to grow back.
This is a pic of him before the burn.
This is a pic of him about 4 months AFTER the burn.
Here is him today. Note how much of his dorsal crest was lost.
Here is Ardi next to one of the CH melleri. He seems to be protecting him from the evil camera...