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@Poveglia Try thinking the way your chameleon thinks. Baby chameleons are different than adults--much more reactive and shy. Think about how they live in the wild. Most chameleons just sit around and wait for food to come their way. Babies can starve to death if food isn't plentiful enough to walk within striking range. I see you have a bowl of meal worms in the bottom of his cage out in the open and very exposed. I can't tell how big your baby is, but I would not expect a baby to go down to the bottom of the cage and travel 18" in the open to food in a bowl. It just isn't likely to happen. You want to make everything easy for the baby--plentiful food that is always close.
Are your food items too big? The guide of "no bigger than the space between their eyes" doesn't always tell the whole story. Try smaller feeders and forget the meal worms. Free range the feeders. Many won't cup feed.
Hydration: I see what looks like a black tube running through the plastic mass of fake leaves on the right. Is that a dripper line? One point of a "dripper" is the movement of drops of water that the animal sees dripping and is attracted towards. Which leads to the next problem--layout of the furnishings.
You seem to be approaching the cage the way many novices do in a 2-dimensional way. Looking at the cage from the front, it appears as if there is cover and areas to move. Looking at the cage from a baby chameleon's perspective shows it doesn't seem to be quite adequate to my eyes.
First, you need cover at the top of the cage as others have mentioned. The cover needs to be in three dimensions and fill the entire cage, not just the back, side and bottom with bare in the middle. Babies often don't risk leaving cover to get near to their heat source/lights. You want the cage filled with places to hide and pathways to move around the whole cage, not just the sides. Plants on the bottom are not what a veiled wants or uses.
A common mistake many make using those masses of plastic plants is to leave them in an impenetrable mass which does nothing. Unless the baby is really tiny, they often can't or won't hide in them. Take the strands of plastic leaves, spread them out and wind them around branches. Remove some of the tufts and tie the tufts to other branches/vines so you get cover throughout the cage not just in two lumps of green plastic. Zip ties are a chameleon keeper's best friend. Can you tell I am not impressed with plastic?
Use living plants which will hold water droplets on their leaves for a much longer time than plastic because they are breathing and releasing humidity into the air. I often tie smaller plants in pots throughout the cage so I can get natural greenery high in the cage without having a big plant. A big hanging pothos from Home Depot can go along way. I often cut up a big pot of sword ferns and plant the clumps in smaller pots to hang around the cages.
The carpet on the bottom should go. If you are giving him enough water, it will be a sodden mess in no time. Dealing with water is a fact of chameleon keeping, especially in a cage that is not heavily planted.
Hope that helps and doesn't discourage you. I didn't mean it to sound critical but I think it does; and truth be told, I'm too lazy this morning to fix it! That's not my intent, so apologies in advance for any perceived slight.
No, please tell it like it is. This isn't about hurting my ego, it's about providing the best living area for my new resident. I will definitely do all that you said.
Also, the black "tube like thing" is one of those eco vines they sell at Petco. My dripper is on the top, and cant be seen in this photo, but I have it protruding from the side, dripping onto those plastic vines (with the drip basin underneath).
Another question I have....if the baby wont climb down, what do I do with the crickets? They seem to be just hiding on the bottom of the cage (I am removing the mat too). If they have nowhere to hide, will they climb up to him?
Good job on the real plants my only observation at this point is that you will need many more horizontal branches running left/right. The vines can weave vertically and, while the plants are a great addition, I would think they would need to be up higher with some coverage nearer the top of the enclosure.