Brad Ramsey
Retired Moderator
Definitively, all chameleons will do well and thrive in the right environment if never held.
-Brad
-Brad
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I'd like to add something that I'm surprised hasn't come up.
You see often on here, people posting "my chams pacing by the door of the cage" or "scratching at the front" and everyone only says one thing- that they need a bigger cage.
You've decided that your cham is eager to be on your hand. Why does no one assume that the chameleon could just see the hand as an escape from an inappropriate cage?
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I have him in a very large, well planted cage that meets all the requirements that i have seen on any major breeders website(FLchams, Kammerflage Kreations....). If my cage is "an inappropriate cage" then so is yours because im sure you have met all of the same requirements that i have. Like i said i have another cham in the same conditions that does not come to me so I leave him alone. My whole reason in posting on this thread was to point out that every cham seems to be different so people shouldnt be so definitive in telling others that they should never handle their chameleons or they will die.
I absolutely did not single you out. I was suggesting one thing that could explain this, and I'm sure this would apply to someone on this site. but I was just giving everyone something to think about.
Definitively, all chameleons will do well and thrive in the right environment if never held.
-Brad
Simple answer...we don't know. Only the chameleon knows whether or not it likes interaction. They all have different personalities so I guess you just go with what your cham likes, but if it doesn't like handling (which most don't) then stay away. I don't think there's anything wrong with being over-cautious with a pet. Just shows you want to do the best for it. I wouldn't call any of the replies on here "dramatic"...
Sorry to say... but there isn't....
We just need to be positive and give constructive advice rather than a beat down. People who have no rep, have no rep for a reason LOL
True, but you cannot definitively say that all chameleons that are handled DO NOT thrive and do well.
I had a large male Panther once, awhile back. It was a very awsome ambanja.
Well if, and when I would sit down anywhere in the living room the Cham named "Titan" would climb down out of his tree, come clear across the floor, climb my pantleg and sit on my lap. Now that was COOL! and my first Cham ever. He Just always wanted to be by me! The bad News is I lost him to my Ex-Wife in our divorce. As I got to keep our other pretty cool Nosy Be male.
Just figured I share such and awsome Chameleon with ya.
We have sort of gotten off the point, which I think, is that Turtle should not buy a chameleon with the hope or expection that he can have it play with him. Chams don't really play with people, people play with chams and that is a whole different think. There that is my lsat 2 cents worth on the subject, except I personally hope turtle does not buy a cham.
I just got a veiled about a week ago, and have quickly learned that she likes it MUCH more in her enclosure rather than in my hands. When I just try to take her out for a moment to roam free, she usually looks around, then moves straight to her cage, then chills on a branch. I could leave the door open all day and would not have a fear of her leaving the secure feeling of home.
How do you know that a chameleon that eagerly climbs onto a persons hand(they seem to clearly understand that it isnt a threat) doesnt enjoy getting out of the cage and getting a different view other than the mini enviroment you have made? My panther always goes for my hand when I stick it in his cage and I hold him for a bit and usually take him to a tree in the front yard if the weather is right. Now my veiled hates to be handled and I can see that my presence stresses him so I keep my interaction with him to a minimum. If the chameleon calmly comes to you and is relaxed than I dont see the problem, but if it is clear(chameleons can show emotion like no other animal on earth) that they are frightened and upset you should leave them alone. The one guy said his friends who was handled all the time lived for 6 1/2 years... I could be wrong but I think that is a pretty long time. People shouldnt be so dramatic about it, like "Put it high up in it's cage and leave it alone or it will die. K thnx."
i have to say that i agree with most of this
To make the habitat as real as it can be you should keep human interaction to a minimum.
If someones cham seems to love interaction, perhaps nobody told it 'they dont like it' !
Just to throw this out there (and add more to the already burning fire).
I had to handle my veiled hermie for two extended periods of time... one when he had MBD and broke all four legs ... and when he had a really bad kidney infection. He seemed to cope with the MBD period of time ok ... I'm sure it was not enjoyable for him, but I do think he realized that he needed help and we were giving it ... we knew he was feeling better when he started hissing at us again (we don't call him hissy hermie for nothing!).
BUT the kidney infection really messed him up mentally. he had to get injections multiple times a day for over a week. If he even SEES me by his cage he will dive off his branch head first to the bottom (literally throws himself off). So I don't handle him at all anymore (except to put him back in his cage at night if he has been free ranging and doesnt return on his own ... so maybe once a month).
Handling him everyday made him miserable and the effects were lasting. overall I think that he is a much unhappier cham even though it's been about 6 months since his kidney problem. I acknowledge the effect it has had and at the time felt like I had no choice bc the other option was probably death. I would like to think that his life now is better than death.
It didn't happen overnight ... the effect added up. I'm not saying to NEVER handle your cham (it can be hard to clean their cages when they are in there ... it would make going to the vet impossible ... and some personalities might tolerate it more than others) but i wish i had never had to.
The issue here is that these animals live a solitaire life.... To make the habitat as real as it can be you should keep human interaction to a minimum.