blondebrowncoat
Member
Hi all. I've had leopard geckos for years. This past week I was contacted by someone looking to offload a 5 month old Veiled Chameleon. I've always wanted one, and now that I own a home I've got the space, so I agreed. It was free and the person giving it away was...less than experienced when it came to reptiles so I was expecting him to be rough.
He's so bad. He hasn't opened his eyes since I got him and barely reacts to being handled. Very weak. Obviously hasn't been eating. He was kept with one plastic tree and a water dish. So dehydrated that his tail looked like a shriveled up green bean.
I've been misting him every hour and fed him some kind of vitamin solution this morning that was 2 parts water (it came with him). He's got a Boston fern and climbing branches, good lighting and heat. I've got him in the best situation he could be in - but he's still pretty rough and will take a lot of recovering.
For those of you who have rescued chams in bad shape before, do you have any tips? Any red flags to look out for? Vet says at this point I'm doing all I can. Really want some first hand accounts of someone who has been here before.
One question in particular - should I leave a ceramic heat lamp on overnight? It gets down to about 65 degrees in our house and this morning he had all but given up. He greatly improved once I got heat back on him. I want to get him in a good cycle but not at the risk of him getting too cold.
Attached is a pic of him from this morning.
Thank you!
He's so bad. He hasn't opened his eyes since I got him and barely reacts to being handled. Very weak. Obviously hasn't been eating. He was kept with one plastic tree and a water dish. So dehydrated that his tail looked like a shriveled up green bean.
I've been misting him every hour and fed him some kind of vitamin solution this morning that was 2 parts water (it came with him). He's got a Boston fern and climbing branches, good lighting and heat. I've got him in the best situation he could be in - but he's still pretty rough and will take a lot of recovering.
For those of you who have rescued chams in bad shape before, do you have any tips? Any red flags to look out for? Vet says at this point I'm doing all I can. Really want some first hand accounts of someone who has been here before.
One question in particular - should I leave a ceramic heat lamp on overnight? It gets down to about 65 degrees in our house and this morning he had all but given up. He greatly improved once I got heat back on him. I want to get him in a good cycle but not at the risk of him getting too cold.
Attached is a pic of him from this morning.
Thank you!