ciafardo 4
New Member
Disgusting attitude!
Its not an attitude just a fact!
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Disgusting attitude!
Brock is right!!! Leave a pod of hornworms in there and you chameleon will be healthier than it was when you left.
Never listen to the advice from someone who mists their veileds for 20 minutes five times a day. What a waste of water!
Seriously some people need to relax. And by the way, if you want to hold your chameleon, go for it!!!!
If it was a montane species or a young panther, I'd never give advice to leave it alone for 6 days unless everything is automated and there was plenty of food, but a veiled is much more resilient and can make the trek without misting and can go a few days without food. A panther could also but would need automatic misting.
I'm sorry but 90% of these opinions are 'personal feelings' and mine is from experience.
I have left chameleons and other lizards to the care of family, with detailed instructions, when I am away for a month or more at a time, and I have always come back to at least one dead animal, or one that was oversupplemented, or underwatered.
I trust automation more than human error, and in 6 days if you get a friend to look after it, worse can happen in a short amount of time than if you had left him alone and done what I recommended. Now if you CAN find someone near you that can look after him, then
OBVIOUSLY
that is the best thing to do. Just hope their collection doesn't have coccidia I've heard some horror stories. Likewise make sure your cham doesn't infect their collection with anything.
I'm sorry but 90% of these opinions are 'personal feelings' and mine is from experience.
My 'betters'?
Be careful when you tell people to "go for it" if they want to hold their chameleon. Chameleons aren't meant to be held. They are shy, docile creatures made to mimic a leaf. They think almost anything around them is a possible threat.
Now, there is cases such as mine where I acquired a loving outgoing panther chameleon. THIS IS NOT THE CASE FOR EVERYONE. My first vieled would run whenever I tried to pick her up, so I never did. You need time and a lot of attention with the cham for it to trust that your not a threat to there lives. I got my panther at 5 months of age and got him to eat out of my hands within 2 weeks.
If you hand mist everyday and put food in his cage everyday the cham will eventually learn that your not a threat. But there will be some chams that will not want to be to touched at all. There is another great thread about this somewhere else. I got my panther at 5 months and got him to eat out of my fingers within 2 weeks.
Right now it is all a mess on the floor because I haven't purchased all of the bits to make it look nice....... But it does function....
This is the bit that controls the watering... 4 seperate misting 'quadrants' or 'sectors' AKA: four valves that control supply. I run all the melleri on one valve, veileds and panther on another... the third is wired up for misting outside, when I have cages there. The fourth isn't operating... just don't need it yet.
I have a lot of cleaning up to do...... But it does work.
At the moment because I am moving all of this around I am manually plugging in my lights and misting the chams......
Holy crap! All that is missing is Chewbacca pounding on the whole thing with a wrench!