chuck
New Member
my two cents
You can't have too much greenery or fake vine in there - make sure the fake vine is appropriately sized for her feet - it's really effective to wrap a large vine with a small one.
Jackson's Chameleons are very tolerable of cooler temperatures. Depending on what part of California you are in, she may more difficult to keep cool than keep warm. But they like it damp. You should get a a quality spray bottle from a garden supply store (a really good reptile place might have one, too), one with a pump to build pressure. Mist the whole area, all the leaves at least once a day. Use hot chlorinated water - it won't be hot when it hits her, as long as you turn the nozzle to fine. If she's drinking water from the drip, that's great. When she's older, she will grow to like the misting and will sit in it and drink. The mist will coat the leaves and provide her with drinking opportunities other than the dripper, and she will also breathe in the moisture through her nasal passage. It will also help her moisten her eyes, although she will shut them and bulge them out while you do it. She won't like it at all if the water is cold.
She looks to be no older than four or five months to me - anyone else want to chime in? You may want to set up a feeding cup so that you can monitor her eating, and so that fewer crickets escape.
You can't have too much greenery or fake vine in there - make sure the fake vine is appropriately sized for her feet - it's really effective to wrap a large vine with a small one.
Jackson's Chameleons are very tolerable of cooler temperatures. Depending on what part of California you are in, she may more difficult to keep cool than keep warm. But they like it damp. You should get a a quality spray bottle from a garden supply store (a really good reptile place might have one, too), one with a pump to build pressure. Mist the whole area, all the leaves at least once a day. Use hot chlorinated water - it won't be hot when it hits her, as long as you turn the nozzle to fine. If she's drinking water from the drip, that's great. When she's older, she will grow to like the misting and will sit in it and drink. The mist will coat the leaves and provide her with drinking opportunities other than the dripper, and she will also breathe in the moisture through her nasal passage. It will also help her moisten her eyes, although she will shut them and bulge them out while you do it. She won't like it at all if the water is cold.
She looks to be no older than four or five months to me - anyone else want to chime in? You may want to set up a feeding cup so that you can monitor her eating, and so that fewer crickets escape.