Hello all!
(First off, this is my first post here, I am not super familiar with this forum, so please feel free to move this posting as needed.)
So, this winter, I received a mixed blessing! Long story short, I have become the new caretaker for 5 chameleons, in somewhat of an unexpected rescue situation. I have raised various reptiles and amphibians for 20+ years, although I am completely new to the chameleon world, and I am slightly overwhelmed. I've been doing as much research as I can, but I am fairly busy, and would rather devote as much as my time actually helping and making necessary changes in their environment/my care of them, than spending hours on the internet reading information. Also, there were a few other types of animals adopted in this rescue, so my attention is a bit divided. But I care a lot about all animals, and these guys are super cool, so I want to help them out. Like I said, I do have a lot of general herp experience, so I figure I can handle it. I just need to understand all of these guys needs, and set up a good routine. I am hoping that some folks on here may be willing to share some detailed advice about how to best care for these guys, recommended equipment, etc.
So, what I have are:
an older male panther (ambilobe, I believe)
younger male panther (nosy be, or some mix possibly?)
2 female panthers (?)
1 male crested
Will post pictures, probably tomorrow.
the older male panther is kind of sick. they had not been properly cared for in who knows how long, and were brought to my house to care for them. there was also a Jackson's who didn't survive the transit, DOA. I've had them now for almost 2 months, and all seem pretty healthy except the older male panther. From my research, it looks like he might have some sort of respiratory infection (a lot of mucus build-up around the mouth, general "sick" look, trouble catching prey sometimes). I think he is doing a bit better, I feed him mixed diet of roaches, silkies, crickets, etc, and mist him extra, clean his cage as soon as he dirties it. Unfortunately, I don't think I cant take him to the vet for antibiotics at this time; this was already an unexpected rescue, and because I don't have all the heating/lighting set up for everyone in the most effective manner, my power bill has gone through the roof! 2-3x my normal bill! which brings me to my next challenge.
How do I best set up heat/lights/lighting schedule, for the chameleons, and my wallet? Right now I am using these dual-bulb halogen+cfl fixtures that use one small cfl for lighting and one little halogen bulb for heat, all in one fixture. I seriously think these are putting some serious numbers on my power bill. Chameleons do not need their heat-basking light on all day correct? I can run cfl normal day hours, then use a separate heat fixture for the halogen bulbs for maybe 3-5hrs like high noon sun? does heat tape or other heating element prove any benefit or efficiency with chameleons? Its pretty cold where I live, so I've had to run room heaters just to keep the ambient temps up at night etc, which is probably the other half, if not more to my power bill. I don't mean to sound cheap, but something cant be right. I try to be conservative, and my power bill usually isn't much at all, even with few lights and heaters I already run, bout $150-250 in the winter, less in the summer. My last two bills are $500 each! Is that typical? am I freaking out over nothing? seems like a significant jump to me...
Which brings me to my 3rd challenge, If those sound like standard bills and use of power, well, I'm going to need to get a bit more involved in order to support the hobby! How do I get everyone in best shape and then initiate some breading? How different is care from when breeding and when not? How do you tell what locality females are from, and is it frowned upon to mix up localities when breeding?
Any and all other info will be greatly appreciated by me and all these lizards!
Thanks a lot!
~XDX~
(First off, this is my first post here, I am not super familiar with this forum, so please feel free to move this posting as needed.)
So, this winter, I received a mixed blessing! Long story short, I have become the new caretaker for 5 chameleons, in somewhat of an unexpected rescue situation. I have raised various reptiles and amphibians for 20+ years, although I am completely new to the chameleon world, and I am slightly overwhelmed. I've been doing as much research as I can, but I am fairly busy, and would rather devote as much as my time actually helping and making necessary changes in their environment/my care of them, than spending hours on the internet reading information. Also, there were a few other types of animals adopted in this rescue, so my attention is a bit divided. But I care a lot about all animals, and these guys are super cool, so I want to help them out. Like I said, I do have a lot of general herp experience, so I figure I can handle it. I just need to understand all of these guys needs, and set up a good routine. I am hoping that some folks on here may be willing to share some detailed advice about how to best care for these guys, recommended equipment, etc.
So, what I have are:
an older male panther (ambilobe, I believe)
younger male panther (nosy be, or some mix possibly?)
2 female panthers (?)
1 male crested
Will post pictures, probably tomorrow.
the older male panther is kind of sick. they had not been properly cared for in who knows how long, and were brought to my house to care for them. there was also a Jackson's who didn't survive the transit, DOA. I've had them now for almost 2 months, and all seem pretty healthy except the older male panther. From my research, it looks like he might have some sort of respiratory infection (a lot of mucus build-up around the mouth, general "sick" look, trouble catching prey sometimes). I think he is doing a bit better, I feed him mixed diet of roaches, silkies, crickets, etc, and mist him extra, clean his cage as soon as he dirties it. Unfortunately, I don't think I cant take him to the vet for antibiotics at this time; this was already an unexpected rescue, and because I don't have all the heating/lighting set up for everyone in the most effective manner, my power bill has gone through the roof! 2-3x my normal bill! which brings me to my next challenge.
How do I best set up heat/lights/lighting schedule, for the chameleons, and my wallet? Right now I am using these dual-bulb halogen+cfl fixtures that use one small cfl for lighting and one little halogen bulb for heat, all in one fixture. I seriously think these are putting some serious numbers on my power bill. Chameleons do not need their heat-basking light on all day correct? I can run cfl normal day hours, then use a separate heat fixture for the halogen bulbs for maybe 3-5hrs like high noon sun? does heat tape or other heating element prove any benefit or efficiency with chameleons? Its pretty cold where I live, so I've had to run room heaters just to keep the ambient temps up at night etc, which is probably the other half, if not more to my power bill. I don't mean to sound cheap, but something cant be right. I try to be conservative, and my power bill usually isn't much at all, even with few lights and heaters I already run, bout $150-250 in the winter, less in the summer. My last two bills are $500 each! Is that typical? am I freaking out over nothing? seems like a significant jump to me...
Which brings me to my 3rd challenge, If those sound like standard bills and use of power, well, I'm going to need to get a bit more involved in order to support the hobby! How do I get everyone in best shape and then initiate some breading? How different is care from when breeding and when not? How do you tell what locality females are from, and is it frowned upon to mix up localities when breeding?
Any and all other info will be greatly appreciated by me and all these lizards!
Thanks a lot!
~XDX~