Lindasjackson
Chameleon Enthusiast
I think the dark coloration is normal for them but not positive.
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I agree with @Lindasjackson, if they are all looking like this guy here, then you really shouldn't be worried about their coloration.
It’s great that the pet store will take them! I don’t want to be a downer, but there are somethings worthwhile thinking about here. First, many people report losses between 2 and 4 months, which is why it is recommended that jax should be older than 4 months before sale. My thoughts on this are that it is related to group raising and poor temp drop at night. In any case, it would be great I’d the pet store is willing to hold them for a few months before selling. Again, congrats on the babies, and think about these considerations.I have all 5 together in one cage right now but planned to sell them to the local pet store once they get to 2 months because I can't fit that many chameleons in this apartment. I like the idea of the small cages but I'm worried they will outgrow them quickly. What did you use for plants and substrate inside the containers?
Noted on the temp drops - that actually scares me because sometimes I wake up and my apartment is too hot if I leave the heater on and too cold if I leave it off. I think what ill do is leave the heater on half power through the night and crack a window just a smidge to let a little cool air in. The cool and warm air should mix and even it out. I have the ceramic heater turned on and I would think with the black trash bag covering 3 sides of the cage it should help to keep it warm and insulated in there for them.It’s great that the pet store will take them! I don’t want to be a downer, but there are somethings worthwhile thinking about here. First, many people report losses between 2 and 4 months, which is why it is recommended that jax should be older than 4 months before sale. My thoughts on this are that it is related to group raising and poor temp drop at night. In any case, it would be great I’d the pet store is willing to hold them for a few months before selling. Again, congrats on the babies, and think about these considerations.
Are those ferns you have in there?Here are the bins I use. They can stay together for a couple weeks but I get them sorted out to pairs asap and then move to individual cages from there. They don't grow as quickly as panthers or veiled. You will have some time with these baby cages.
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I've been meaning to make a blog entry on the steps to building them but life happens.
You don’t need a ceramic heater on at night for them. They need the temp drop at night. In the wild their temps go down into the low 60s and sometimes into the 50s at night. They also need high humidity at night so it’s great you wrapped the cage in plastic on 3 sides. Now if you can get your temps into the low 60s at night you can use your humidifier to create fog for them that mimics the fog that rolls in at night in the wild. It creates great humidity for them to breath. You don’t want warm temps with high humidity because that can give them upper respiratory infections or URI.Noted on the temp drops - that actually scares me because sometimes I wake up and my apartment is too hot if I leave the heater on and too cold if I leave it off. I think what ill do is leave the heater on half power through the night and crack a window just a smidge to let a little cool air in. The cool and warm air should mix and even it out. I have the ceramic heater turned on and I would think with the black trash bag covering 3 sides of the cage it should help to keep it warm and insulated in there for them.
I am inexperienced at this and I'm terrified of losing one of these babies, I have no idea how to care for them really except that they need pinheads, a fine mist more frequently, and daily feedings. I figure if I keep temperature and feeders available in my feeding dish, that they will find the food and stay warm enough to care for themselves.
My understanding is that I just need to provide a proper environment for growth. I know fake plants are frowned upon but this fake tree I have has a lot of branch room for them to walk around. Each baby has picked its own perch on the tree. As they grow I will likely need multiple live plants in there to give them all enough space.
Right now I have a medium amount of foliage/surface area for them to move around on - I don't want them to get lost in there looking for food. When I get paid this friday I'll go pick up a live pothos and place it in a small pot in the enclosure along with the fake plant, hopefully the mix of real and fake plants will suffice for now. They seem to be okay.
In my experience my jacksons doesn't eat any foliage at all - ive never seen her try a nip of her pothos or schleffera, and when I had a dracanae tree she never ate any of that either. I don't expect the babies to try to eat the fake plant, they seem more interested in live insects and mist.
They are small, it's hard to catch them eating. Just going to do my best to provide the best environment I can for them to thrive and let them do the rest. I hope I'm on track with this thought process.
Thank you again for the advice - if I have to wait until 4 months I'm not sure what I'll do, I have a terrarium as well in my storage. Im going to have to try to find some free or low cost used cages or something before 4 months is out so I can house them. There's so little space in this apartment, I'm basically maxed at 3 chameleons, so perhaps I can sell my adult veiled and adult panther or give them away to an experienced owner and I can transition to breeding jacksons chameleons. I don't mind having multiple jacksons chameleons. I would miss my panther and veiled chameleons but if I have to let them go to make room I suppose that's what I'll have to do.
If anyone here is in Oregon - or knows someone in oregon who would want to pick up a 1-2 year old veiled chameleon and a roughly 1 year old panther chameleon within the next couple of months, feel free to send them my way. I'd just want to make sure they are going to good hands.
Otherwise if I cannot make space I'm going to have to get creative. I wish there was a way to stack cages, I may have to use my wall space in here and get some shelves or something to house them in. I have a studio apartment, so housing 8 chameleons is difficult, I have 3 cages already, a terrarium in storage, and now a 4th cage for these babies.
I know once the babies hit 2-3 months they start biting, clawing, and killing one another and I don't want this to happen, so I need solutions. Just trying to rack my brain for options.
Thank you for the advice, it's well founded and I understand what you're saying and why you're saying it. I just hope you can understand my space predicament.
What's the smallest enclosure I could house a 2 or 3 month old jacksons in? Could I possibly get multiple small cages? I wouldn't be keeping them past a year. More advice is welcomed and appreciated. Again if anyone also knows anyone interested in rehoming 2 of my adult chameleons, that is an option for me.
I just saw what you did and recreated it! No guide necessary! 20 bucks at the dollar tree roughly plus 15 bucks for the fern which I divided up into 5. Some cages have more foliage than others but I tried to give them as much as possible. Went with a standard fern because that's all my local fred meyer had that would be safe.I finished the blog entry on building individual baby cages just in case you decide to go that route. It's still a rough draft and needs proofing.
https://www.chameleonforums.com/blogs/individual-baby-cages-or-caging-during-the-time-of-covid.2465/