New Veiled Chameleon, Help Needed

fatikamus

New Member
Hello, I am new to Veiled Chameleons. A student gave me her Veiled chameleon because she no longer could take care of him. I had him for a month and everything seemed fine, but one day he suddenly got sick (lethargic, weak feet, wouldn't eat, heavy breathing) so I rushed him to the vet and the vet decided to euthanize my Cham and thinks he had a lung infection. Safe to say I was really sad about this and so was my class. Before I go out and get another Veiled Chameleon I want to make sure I have a proper enclosure and I am doing everything correctly. I spent countless hours reading info when I got my first Cham but he unfortunately passed away; I do not know if it was something wrong I did, or simply a sickness out of my control. Any suggestions will be greatly appreciated because my chameleons health is my primary concern and I want to make sure I do this right.

  • I sprayed his cage 3-4 times a day using reptisafe water conditioner.
  • Fed him Calcium with D3 dusted crickets and mealworms everyday or every other day except weekends (he was a really picky eater and normally would eat a lot on Monday and Tuesday then go the rest of the week not eating or eathing maybe 1-2 crickets in the day). I gutloaded my crickets with Mazuri gutloading diet.
  • It was difficult maintaing humidity in an open enclosure so it would fluctuate from 30%-70% throughout the day.
  • He would be handled 3 times a week to go outside to soak up plenty of sun.
  • He has two live plants in his cage (not pictured) a pothos and ficus and I put plenty of rocks in order to cover the soil so he wouldn't eat the soil.
  • Dual lamp one with a 60Watt zoo med bulb for basking, and a zoomed UVB fluorescent light for UVB.
Any help and suggestions will be greatly appreciated. I miss my little Godzilla and I hope to do right by him by giving a new chameleon a wonderful and healthy home.
 
Forgot to upload image....I'm new to this site.
 

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Calcium with D3 every day is bad for his health. It needs to be about once a week with D3 and the rest of the week calcium without D3 or Herptivite vitamin supplement. Dust lightly, as too heavy a dusting will deter the cham. Always be sure when putting in live plants with the Cham that you have cleansed the plant thoroughly and repotted them in organic soil. Humidity needs to be 60-80% at least, and basking temperature at the highest point needs to be around 80-95 degrees and in the middle around 70-80 and the bottom is the coolest at around your room temperature. He must also be provided a dripper for hydration throughout the day, as just misting isn't always enough. Your cham can eat a varied diet of crickets, Dubai roaches, super worms, and meal worms, among other insects such as hornworms, waxworms, and some fruits and veggies such as kale, mango, Apple. They must be cut in very, very small pieces so as not to choke your cham if she is interested. There must also be provided a UVB light as close to the basking light as possible. Get rid of any substrate at the bottom of the cage because it can cause harm to your cham's health as well. Bacteria can build up in it, as well as he could accidentally ingest it. Good luck!!
 
I would suggest more branches about 6-8" from the top, along with some cover. This will allow the cham to get close to the basking spot.
 
Thanks everyone for the help!! So two last questions. Petstores dont seem to sell Calcium without D3, any suggestions of a specific brand or product I might jsut be able to buy online? Also, what can I do to keep up the humidity? It is an open enclosure so anytime I mist it, the water evaporates relatively quickly and the higher humidity does not last too long.
 
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