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camimom and carol5208...we are talking Cham bites, right?
For what its worth. I dont think 6 years old is to young,as long as the child understands it cant be handled like a dog or cat and you understand, you will be doing 99.99 percent of the work.
I have a 4 year old and she understands the chameleon is more for watching and not touching. She will even hold still and not move during feeding time, so she can watch without scaring my panther. She helps me with small things like adding water to the reservoir, locating poop to clean and preparing feeder gut load.
Now, the feeder insects are a different story. I let her handle them all she wants, while I clean their cage and add new food. Im pretty sure I have have the only 4 year old girl who knows the difference between, and loves to handle. Silkworms,super worms, Dubai roaches and crickets. I think she likes them more then the Chameleon. LOL. Her favorite activity is unboxing a new shipment of feeders. I found that out the hard way. One time I did it when she wasn't home. Once she got home she proceeded to cry for the next hour because I didn't wait for her. Im waiting for the day she tells me to stop feeding them to the Chameleon.
Again this is just my opinion. But I wanted to share my experience with you because I went back in forth for months trying to decide if it was a good choice for a young child. Im glad I decided to do it, Its been a huge education tool and hobby we can share together and hopefully we will always share together.
I'm completely new to cham ownership but I do not think it is a bad idea for a six year old to help with the care and raising of a chameleon. Aside from the obvious chores keeping feeders and gut loading them properly is a time consuming activity. If he can handle that he can handle anything. The fun stuff is getting your cham to eat out of your hand or from tweezers. It never gets boring. Good luck to you. I think you would be happy with either a cham or a bearded dragon.
I have not owned a bearded dragon myself, but from interacting with them on the limited level I have, my experience is that some of them can be downright friendly. They just look a bit scary
Just keep in mind that this could be a long-term commitment. Beardies can live as long as 10 years if kept healthy and happy. I got my first lizard, a swift, at just a little older than your son. I have always loved reptiles, but I admit now that not only did I do everything wrong, but my interest did wane quickly. My mom ended up being his reluctant primary caretaker. He only lived about two years.
Not trying to scare you or dissuade you. Just something to consider. You might look into adopting an adult beardie. There are always pets that need good homes.
Lathis, appreciate the response....my wife and I have taken plenty of time to exlain to our son that a Bearded Dragon is a long-term commitment so we are hoping that it has sunk in and that we do not become the primary carers lol.
Wish me luck in trying to convince him that a panther Cham is for the future!
My first lizard was a beardie when I was 7 and it really sparked my interest in herps. All the beardies I have met have been really friendly and laid back. As a kid I always wanted a chameleon, but I am glad that I waited until I was older to take on chameleons. The time invested in terms of care is much different for the two species. Chameleons are a stressful pet, you are always looking to see if something is wrong or they appear sick. Beardies care is much more straight forward.
In my experience, I am glad I started with bearded dragons. hope that helps.
Well... He's only 6, so he gets what you give him. "Long term commitment" means nothing to a little kid. They just don't have the capacity to understand what "years and years" really means. Get what would make YOU happy since it really will be your pet
Whatever herp you decide, make sure to post some pics!