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Then you've never been on vacation or fed roaches before
With a misting system, and a cup trained chameleon, they're the easiest pet on the planet. When I'm gone for a few days I put 10-12 roaches in the cup with cricket chow and some collard leaves..fill up the misting resevoir and I'm gone.
Plus roaches can't be free roamed, and roaches are the dream feeder.
how in the world does substrate make poo removal easier??
What could be easier than a clean, plastic bottom?
I am the co-owner of the chameleon with the thread starter... Larry, just will not take the crix from the cup. he prefers hunting over cup feeding. i let a few roam free and he'll hunt and eat those w/o a problem, but he just won't eat from the cup no matter where i place it. did you chameleons begin cup feeding right away or did it take time??
Wouldnt using substrate also increase the risk of nasties (bacteria etc) no matter how well you clean? I dont use any substrate, I never see my veiled on the floor/ground, and since its male there seems no benifit at all.
barefloor is easy to clean thourally and branches are replaced and plants washed.
Im a big beleiver in the KISS principle (keep it simple stupid!)
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Unless your chameleons are sick they shouldn't be on the bottom of the cage and you'd have more to worry about than a little bacteria on some dirt. If you feel taking down the cage and scraping it clean is easier than scooping out a little poop you're welcome to your opinion.
Is Larry a veiled or a panther?.....
That sounds pretty gross, I guess you weren't using a screen cage when you started? Wet substrate and chameleon feces would probably run your family out of the house with the stench. I just keep 1/4" of dry substrate to keep the feces from pasting itself to the cage bottom. What was your first setup? A 10 or 20-gallon aquarium?I used substrate when I got my first chameleon and when I finally heard about the problems with this I removed it. Well, let me tell you it was awful! The substrate was stuck to the bottom and I scraped and scraped and brushed and hosed and used bleach. I let it dry outside in the summertime and finally got it clean. NEVER AGAIN. It smelled if you can believe it and I scooped it out and added new from time to time. Lord knows how my Arnie managed to thrive in my ignorance, but he did, I am smarter and he is lovin his 24X24X48 cage.
I make sure he has the best since I was such a newb...
Normal 16oz. deli-cups usually keep crickets in long enough to get chomped but cup feeding is more for roaches.How do you get the crickets from staying in the cup? Do you rip off their back legs so they can't jump?
That sounds pretty gross, I guess you weren't using a screen cage when you started? Wet substrate and chameleon feces would probably run your family out of the house with the stench. I just keep 1/4" of dry substrate to keep the feces from pasting itself to the cage bottom. What was your first setup? A 10 or 20-gallon aquarium?
Fine bedding is not a risk for impaction, especially when they don't eat it (hence the use of the cup and the original topic of the post). A bored chameleon will chew on fake leaves, newspaper and paper towel. It seems like an odd arguement to assume a few fine grains would cause impaction over a huge chunk of wadded paper towel.Use a paper towel to make cleaning up easier. Having any substrate exposed to the chameleon isn't worth the risk of impaction. Unless of course it's a female then you always want to have something for her to dig/lay in at all times.
It may take him a little while to figure out he has to aim into the cup rather than through the sides. It is important to make sure a branch is leaning directly over the cup so your animal can look in from the top. Some will figure out how to tip the container over but without a perch over the container they may just give up. One benefit of the cup is you can make sure what get's eaten rather than lost in or through the cracks of the cage.hey guys i just got my new veiled yesterday and I feed him about 10-12 crickets free roam. Today I'm starting to feed him from a small plastic cup and even though the crickets haven't been able to get out he seem not interested on them. should i just let them out and let him hunt them while he setle down or should I just leave them there hoping that he will eventually eat them? I don't want to stres him to much since he is just getting used to the place too.
What do you guys recommend?