I've been getting a lot of questions from people about their chameleon not eating, not drinking, etc. and then I'll ask then how long they have had their cham and they'll say something like 2 days. Figured it'd be worth making a video about the transition period when a new chameleon is getting settled in to a new home. I'd love for other keepers to weigh in on common trends they see when bringing home a new cham and advice they might have for new keepers.
Below is the list I've started so far:
1. They won't eat -- Advice: Give them time and privacy. Use a feeder cup to track if and how much they are eating.
2. They won't drink -- Advice: Give them time and privacy. Chams are shy drinkers anyways. Check their urates.
3. They are hiding from you -- Advice: Give them time and privacy. Use tips from how to handle and build trust with a chameleon video.
4. They have bad poop -- Advice: Could be from being shipped or how they were taken care of before coming to you. Monitor poops closely and give them two or three poops to start looking good. Get a fecal test.
5. Their sleep schedule is off/going to sleep early/not basking until later in the day -- Advice: Could be from being shipped or how they were taken care of before coming to you. Give them time to get used to the new light cycle. Make sure lights are on for 12 hours and off for 12 hours.
What other ideas do you guys have?
Below is the list I've started so far:
1. They won't eat -- Advice: Give them time and privacy. Use a feeder cup to track if and how much they are eating.
2. They won't drink -- Advice: Give them time and privacy. Chams are shy drinkers anyways. Check their urates.
3. They are hiding from you -- Advice: Give them time and privacy. Use tips from how to handle and build trust with a chameleon video.
4. They have bad poop -- Advice: Could be from being shipped or how they were taken care of before coming to you. Monitor poops closely and give them two or three poops to start looking good. Get a fecal test.
5. Their sleep schedule is off/going to sleep early/not basking until later in the day -- Advice: Could be from being shipped or how they were taken care of before coming to you. Give them time to get used to the new light cycle. Make sure lights are on for 12 hours and off for 12 hours.
What other ideas do you guys have?