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WOW, what a great turnaround story! Despite your cham having mbd, he still looks absolutely fantastic--amazing coloration!I feel pretty bad about how I started, and I’ve come a long way since. I did almost no research (I now obsessively research anything and everything, not even necessarily chameleons) and my poor, sweet boy came to me with MBD. He was in a glass 10-gallon, with no uvb and excessive heat. He lost his tongue strength for about 9 months. Thankfully, I found the forum. Otherwise, he would not have lived this long. Now he has burn scars on his casque and spikes, and his front legs are permanently warped from MBD, but he regained tongue use, no longer is sick, lives in , and is also going to be a father!
Pics of when he came to me, in the 10 gallon terrarium, and his growth.
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This forum has helped me so much on Leo’s road to recovery. I now try my best to help other newbies like myself raise their chams successfully, like I now was able with my girl Clea, the dam of 21 eggs to hatch in November-January 2021
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And egg pics, because why not?
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Yes, they are all fertile. They have been incubating since March 25. If anyone in Canada wants juveniles when they’re ready, just pm me.
Thanks! He’s an F1 AmbilobeWOW, what a great turnaround story! Despite your cham having mbd, he still looks absolutely fantastic--amazing coloration!