Mr & Mrs Chameleon!

Miss Lily

Chameleon Enthusiast
:DA couple of pics of Amy and Tommy doing his 'n' hers poses!:D

Mr1.jpg


Mrs1.jpg
 
Tiff don't be teasing me like that!! Mr & Mrs indicates a married couple, I was expecting to see them doing the deed. What a let down even with them being beautiful as usual.:(
 
Tiff don't be teasing me like that!! Mr & Mrs indicates a married couple, I was expecting to see them doing the deed. What a let down even with them being beautiful as usual.:(

gorgeous as usual! Your babies are so beautiful. I do agree with Laurie though :)

:eek: There won't be any of those sorts of photos for a while, lol! :D I neither have the space for extra cages or the time to look after all those babies once they hatch! Knowing my luck, Amy would lay far too many like Lily used to, and I really don't think I would know what to do with 100 little green friends all at once!:eek:
 
I always look forward to your pics, Tommy and Amy have a lot of personality that shows on camera. Thanks for sharing.
 
:eek: There won't be any of those sorts of photos for a while, lol! :D I neither have the space for extra cages or the time to look after all those babies once they hatch! Knowing my luck, Amy would lay far too many like Lily used to, and I really don't think I would know what to do with 100 little green friends all at once!:eek:

This is why you keep smaller species!:p They take up less room plus have small, very manageable clutches. However, to each their own;) You have a very nice pair of veileds! Tommy has a very cool casque and they both have nice coloration. As long as you are providing Amy with the necessary, healthy, and restricted diet I would not predict her to have laying complications. You have experience in females laying. You could always breed her, keep 5 or 10 eggs, and give the rest to friends to incubate and deal with. After all, a hobby is about having fun and getting enjoyment from accomplishments not keeping/breeding for profit. Seems a lot have a different agenda when it comes to keeping/breeding reptiles. Yeah its nice to make something to put back into your hobby but I think in a lot of cases with some particular species the satisfaction of $ over rides the satisfaction of the accomplishment of producing such an animal. ANYWAY!!! I am getting off track, again:rolleyes:

Point is, its fun and a great experience to hatch and raise a chameleon!!! You have ways of getting around having to raise a ton of veileds;)
 
Thanks for your input Cainschams! Yeah, I am sure that i could find a way around that one! Trouble is, if I DID breed them - I would find it so hard to part with the babies, lol! Everyone who wanted to buy one would be grilled and questioned so much about their care I would end up not selling any! I would be so particular about who they went to live with, lol! I couldn't let them go to just anybody - I would feel responsible for each and every one!:eek::rolleyes: Amy laying doesn't worry me at this stage - I've been through all that twice with my dear Lily, as you know. She has had a laying bin in her cage since she was 6 months old. I am ready, even if she isn't, lol!:D I would like to breed them one day but it would be just for the accomplishment factor. I can't even begin to imagine how cute all those l'il green friends would be!

Yes, I would love to have some of the smaller species one day - I love Carpets, Jackson's and Rudis. Sadly, none of those are very easy to find in the UK, at least not anywhere near where I live - they can occasionally be found right up in the Northern of the Country.
 
Back
Top Bottom