trickedoutbiker
Avid Member
So I have a panther chameleon which has been in my possession since October of 2015. He was 3 months old when I first got him, meaning he was born sometime in July. To keep it simple, I just say his birthday is July 1st. So now, he is about 1 year and 8 months old.
The entire time I have had him, there has never been any problems. He had a spot on him one time and I thought it was a burn but it was some odd patch of skin that never came off when he shed (but it did end up coming off the following shed). That's literally the only problem I have ever had with the little man. He gets his food dusted per the recommended schedule we all talk about here and he gets lots of sunlight during the summer. He has never had any parasites and gets checked two times a year for them. He has always been active and has always ate every insect presented to him. I go out with a net in the summer and catch all sorts of wild bugs for him and he loves the variety, the katydids especially. Sometimes it would take him an hour or so to actually want to eat a new bug if it was his first time seeing it, but he always has, without question. Never has been picky. Well, that is, until lately.
You see, my chameleon is hooked on Superworms. Like, bad. "Bad" is actually an understatement. Don't ask me how, because it is something I've only ever gave him a few times a week as treats for the entire course of his life.
He used to eat crickets all the time as his main feeder until I got tired of the noise and the die-offs and moved him to Dubia in April 2016, which was a process, but he did it successfully. He has always eaten them since then without question. Well, up until the past couple months.
All the little man wants is Superworms now and I have ZERO idea why. He has turned down EVERYTHING I have bought for him lately except for Blue Bottle Flies, which aren't the greatest feeders because they cannot be gutloaded. Literally, every other thing, he just stares at unless it is a superworm, which he strikes at within seconds, every time, without hesitation. When I've been feeding him all the time, I always give a few different insects per feeding to avoid him getting bored with something as they sometimes do if they eat the same thing too much. I always try to keep things switched up the best I can.
In the past two months, I've bought him hornworms, crickets, black soldier fly larvae (which I would let turn into flies), and silkworms. He wastes it all and doesn't even touch it, which is quite irritating, because if I wanted to waste money, I would throw it in a fire. Superworms are all he wants right now and I have no idea what gave him that silly idea. Yea, superworms are okay to eat, but they are definitely not good as a main staple feeder. Kyú seems to think otherwise....
So today, I finally broke, and I did what I had hoped I would never have to do. I force fed him a single medium-sized Dubia roach. It was honestly a bit painful for me to do because I could tell he was not happy at all about it. I got him out of his cage and sat down at the kitchen table, and was going to do the method of grabbing behind his jawbone to make him open his mouth, but our Mini Aussie dog decided it wanted to run up to me at this point. I should of stayed in the room the chameleon is in to avoid the dog like usual, but quite honestly, the dog helped. Once Kyú saw that dog at my feet, he puffed up brighter than I have ever seen him get, and he also started to hiss too, which is something I have never heard him do in my life.
He is typically a very calm chameleon. When he puffed up and opened his mouth, I put the medium-sized Dubia in his mouth using a pair of tweezers to avoid getting bitten. He spit it out the first time, so I tried it a second time, with success. As soon as it was in his mouth the second time, I immediately lifted him into the air as far as I could above me so he would be above everything and out of view of the dog. He shut his mouth and swallowed the Dubia. Success. I then proceeded to place him back in his cage, and I won't bother him or even look at him until tomorrow so he can have a chance to calm down.
It's not something I wanted to do. At all. I feel like he is going to hate me forever now and ruin all of the progress we have made with him over the course of his time with us. He's always been so friendly and comes out of his cage if you place your finger next to him, because in the summer, that usually means he is getting to go outside for a couple hours. He loves the outside trees he chills in. I feel like he is going to hate my guts until eternity now....
To be honest, I have no idea what I am looking for with this post. I just needed to vent a bit because like I mentioned, it's not something I ever thought I would have to do for the lil man. But it needed to be done. He needs to kick this superworm crap he is on. All he has ate in the past month and a half are superworms and nothing more, besides all 100 blue bottle flies I got from Nick Barta when I bought a cleaner crew for my roach colony (thanks by the way Nick if you are reading this). And even then, Kyú is hardly eating the superworms because I am not giving him a lot of them due to the fact that they are hard-shelled and not the best main feeders as I mentioned before. He is on an every-other-day feed schedule, and for the past month or so, he has been eating the superworms every other day, about 3 of them a day. Not enough to fill him up, but enough to where he is not completely starving. Any other insect I have bought and tried to give him, he just looks at me like I am stupid. So I tried to starve him this past week for 5 days and see if that might make him more willing to eat something other than a worm since there was nothing in his belly. He didn't want to budge. That's when I decided to force feed him today.
I don't know why he was eating Dubia perfectly fine as his main feeder for almost a year and decided he didn't want them no more. It's not like he was getting sick of them because like I mentioned before, I have always offered him 2-3 different feeders per feeding to keep him interested. It's always been about 3-4 medium sized Dubia, plus two other insects at least, giving him only one of them each per feeding. Never had a problem with that. In the summer, he actually hardly eats Dubia because I am so busy catching him butterflies, dragonflies, katydids, cicada, praying mantids, moths, walking sticks, and a few other things.
So what gives? Does anyone AT ALL have ANY tips for how to get him off this superworm kick he is on? Like I said, I don't know what made him start this, but I do know that superworms aren't about to be his main feeder. That's what my colony of Dubia is for. He needs to eat the Dubia and everything else I present as well. It's getting to be quite irritating.
Any tips at all or any input would be appreciated more than you could ever know.
The entire time I have had him, there has never been any problems. He had a spot on him one time and I thought it was a burn but it was some odd patch of skin that never came off when he shed (but it did end up coming off the following shed). That's literally the only problem I have ever had with the little man. He gets his food dusted per the recommended schedule we all talk about here and he gets lots of sunlight during the summer. He has never had any parasites and gets checked two times a year for them. He has always been active and has always ate every insect presented to him. I go out with a net in the summer and catch all sorts of wild bugs for him and he loves the variety, the katydids especially. Sometimes it would take him an hour or so to actually want to eat a new bug if it was his first time seeing it, but he always has, without question. Never has been picky. Well, that is, until lately.
You see, my chameleon is hooked on Superworms. Like, bad. "Bad" is actually an understatement. Don't ask me how, because it is something I've only ever gave him a few times a week as treats for the entire course of his life.
He used to eat crickets all the time as his main feeder until I got tired of the noise and the die-offs and moved him to Dubia in April 2016, which was a process, but he did it successfully. He has always eaten them since then without question. Well, up until the past couple months.
All the little man wants is Superworms now and I have ZERO idea why. He has turned down EVERYTHING I have bought for him lately except for Blue Bottle Flies, which aren't the greatest feeders because they cannot be gutloaded. Literally, every other thing, he just stares at unless it is a superworm, which he strikes at within seconds, every time, without hesitation. When I've been feeding him all the time, I always give a few different insects per feeding to avoid him getting bored with something as they sometimes do if they eat the same thing too much. I always try to keep things switched up the best I can.
In the past two months, I've bought him hornworms, crickets, black soldier fly larvae (which I would let turn into flies), and silkworms. He wastes it all and doesn't even touch it, which is quite irritating, because if I wanted to waste money, I would throw it in a fire. Superworms are all he wants right now and I have no idea what gave him that silly idea. Yea, superworms are okay to eat, but they are definitely not good as a main staple feeder. Kyú seems to think otherwise....
So today, I finally broke, and I did what I had hoped I would never have to do. I force fed him a single medium-sized Dubia roach. It was honestly a bit painful for me to do because I could tell he was not happy at all about it. I got him out of his cage and sat down at the kitchen table, and was going to do the method of grabbing behind his jawbone to make him open his mouth, but our Mini Aussie dog decided it wanted to run up to me at this point. I should of stayed in the room the chameleon is in to avoid the dog like usual, but quite honestly, the dog helped. Once Kyú saw that dog at my feet, he puffed up brighter than I have ever seen him get, and he also started to hiss too, which is something I have never heard him do in my life.
He is typically a very calm chameleon. When he puffed up and opened his mouth, I put the medium-sized Dubia in his mouth using a pair of tweezers to avoid getting bitten. He spit it out the first time, so I tried it a second time, with success. As soon as it was in his mouth the second time, I immediately lifted him into the air as far as I could above me so he would be above everything and out of view of the dog. He shut his mouth and swallowed the Dubia. Success. I then proceeded to place him back in his cage, and I won't bother him or even look at him until tomorrow so he can have a chance to calm down.
It's not something I wanted to do. At all. I feel like he is going to hate me forever now and ruin all of the progress we have made with him over the course of his time with us. He's always been so friendly and comes out of his cage if you place your finger next to him, because in the summer, that usually means he is getting to go outside for a couple hours. He loves the outside trees he chills in. I feel like he is going to hate my guts until eternity now....
To be honest, I have no idea what I am looking for with this post. I just needed to vent a bit because like I mentioned, it's not something I ever thought I would have to do for the lil man. But it needed to be done. He needs to kick this superworm crap he is on. All he has ate in the past month and a half are superworms and nothing more, besides all 100 blue bottle flies I got from Nick Barta when I bought a cleaner crew for my roach colony (thanks by the way Nick if you are reading this). And even then, Kyú is hardly eating the superworms because I am not giving him a lot of them due to the fact that they are hard-shelled and not the best main feeders as I mentioned before. He is on an every-other-day feed schedule, and for the past month or so, he has been eating the superworms every other day, about 3 of them a day. Not enough to fill him up, but enough to where he is not completely starving. Any other insect I have bought and tried to give him, he just looks at me like I am stupid. So I tried to starve him this past week for 5 days and see if that might make him more willing to eat something other than a worm since there was nothing in his belly. He didn't want to budge. That's when I decided to force feed him today.
I don't know why he was eating Dubia perfectly fine as his main feeder for almost a year and decided he didn't want them no more. It's not like he was getting sick of them because like I mentioned before, I have always offered him 2-3 different feeders per feeding to keep him interested. It's always been about 3-4 medium sized Dubia, plus two other insects at least, giving him only one of them each per feeding. Never had a problem with that. In the summer, he actually hardly eats Dubia because I am so busy catching him butterflies, dragonflies, katydids, cicada, praying mantids, moths, walking sticks, and a few other things.
So what gives? Does anyone AT ALL have ANY tips for how to get him off this superworm kick he is on? Like I said, I don't know what made him start this, but I do know that superworms aren't about to be his main feeder. That's what my colony of Dubia is for. He needs to eat the Dubia and everything else I present as well. It's getting to be quite irritating.
Any tips at all or any input would be appreciated more than you could ever know.
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