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I'm not dusting the crickets just the super worms. I've got calcium with and without D3 I give her the D3 twice a month. When I mist her I usually try to use up an entire 8 oz misting bottle on her and around her enclosureHow long are you misting each time you do mist?
Adding more foliage will help collect water droplets for her to drink off the leaves.
As I read through your post you said you feed calcium dusted superworms every other day and 10 or so crickets. Are you dusting the crickets as well? What does your supplementation schedule look like?
Her urates are also a really milky yellowish whiteAlso, check her urates. If they are yellowish to orange, then she is most likely dehydrated. Her eyes dont look sunken in which is good. The eye turrets usually start to look sunken when they are extremely dehydrated or sick.
Ok I'll start dusting them as well, and yeah! She'll close her eye and then it'll squish a little bit and then she'll open it again. She doesn't do it very often but she's done it enough for me to question it.Being that it's a female I would dust the crickets with calcium too.
By blink...do you mean rolling her eye around inside the turret or sort of squishing then eye shut then opening it agwin.?
Yeah she is going through another shed at the moment so maybe a piece of skin is stuckThe squishing of the eye is just cleaning it as long as it's only once in a while...if she's doing it constantly/frequently then it could be an infection or something stuck in it. A good very very fine misting might help.
I have a dripper but I stopped using it because she didn't seem to drink from it at all. She's more interested when I spray the sides of the enclosure or drinking from her vines or leavesHow are you providing water for her? Does she have a dripper?
One comment..female veileds can lay eggs without having been mated. If they are constantly overfed once they are sexually mature (get mustardy yellow splotches on them) then they can have egglaying issues, prolapse, develop MBD, etc.