OldChamKeeper
Chameleon Enthusiast
So I just got my second quad light fixture from Todd over lightyourreptiles. Not a cheap purchase. The reason I'm sharing this is for all the newer keepers out there wondering if they should purchase such a bad ass lighting system.
I've kept a lot of reptiles over forty years. Used a lot of different lighting. The most common method I used was to buy a $20 dual shop light fixture and stick in it a plant light and a zoo-med 5.0. Overall I'd spend less than a hundred buck on that. Why is that description important? Because it's about the cheapest way you go with a chameleon. If you have less than that, you most likely got nothing that works long term.
In the picture below on the right you'll see one of my good sized holding cages. Notice how it is bright at the top and darker at the bottom? That cage has the shop light system. On the left is a larger more permanent home set for my female Parson. See how bright it is even at the bottom? The differences in the light's color/intensity? That's the new Quad fixture with two daylight bulbs, a plant bulb, and a 12% UVB Arcadia bulb (I use the 12% due to the height of the cage, the fact it shines thru a metal screen, and the animal has plenty of options to hide in the shade or use elevation). Very cool feature is that a timer is built in, I can turn off half of the bulbs if I need to, and there are blue led lights for a moonlight effect.
The #1 thing that makes keeping a chameleon expensive is not the cage, it's the lighting. You can make a cage, you can't fudge lighting.
I highly recommend Todd for lighting questions and gear. I wish this stuff was around back in the 80's
I've kept a lot of reptiles over forty years. Used a lot of different lighting. The most common method I used was to buy a $20 dual shop light fixture and stick in it a plant light and a zoo-med 5.0. Overall I'd spend less than a hundred buck on that. Why is that description important? Because it's about the cheapest way you go with a chameleon. If you have less than that, you most likely got nothing that works long term.
In the picture below on the right you'll see one of my good sized holding cages. Notice how it is bright at the top and darker at the bottom? That cage has the shop light system. On the left is a larger more permanent home set for my female Parson. See how bright it is even at the bottom? The differences in the light's color/intensity? That's the new Quad fixture with two daylight bulbs, a plant bulb, and a 12% UVB Arcadia bulb (I use the 12% due to the height of the cage, the fact it shines thru a metal screen, and the animal has plenty of options to hide in the shade or use elevation). Very cool feature is that a timer is built in, I can turn off half of the bulbs if I need to, and there are blue led lights for a moonlight effect.
The #1 thing that makes keeping a chameleon expensive is not the cage, it's the lighting. You can make a cage, you can't fudge lighting.
I highly recommend Todd for lighting questions and gear. I wish this stuff was around back in the 80's