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your feeding him 25 crickets? i have a veiled hes 4 1/2 months old and hes only eating abut 3 or 4 crickets and 4 or 5 roaches in a day is this bad and how do i get him to eat more?
Go easy on the wax worms.
Here is a link to a list of the commonly offered prey, and info about each:
https://www.chameleonforums.com/blogs/sandrachameleon/74-feeders.html
some good choices, other than crickets and roaches, would be:
Terrestrial isopods, butterworms, silkworms
Please tell me, how do u gutload silkworms??!!
I can only get them to eat the mulberry leaf chow!
5 Wax worms will not hurt your cham, don't worry, but really they aren't the best feeder, so it is definitely not recommended. Superworms and mealworms do not have a high chance of impaction, however, I have been warned that if a chameleon begins eating superworms you will have a very hard time of getting them to eat anything else, tho I have not had this problem before. The supers and meal worms do have a hard shell, so it is better for your chameleon to eat things like hornworms, silkworms, occasionally some butters, crickets, you could also try to get him to eat some veggies too.
Please tell me, how do u gutload silkworms??!!
I can only get them to eat the mulberry leaf chow!
that is all they eat. You do not gutload them!!
I just see so many people on here say that they cause impaction and I so far since I have been a member have not seen one case of this.
I have personal experience with it. yes it CAN happen.
IMHO Mealworms should form no more than 10% of a chameleons diet and superworms no more than 20%
and, ideally, together no more than 20%
You can gutload silkworms on mulberry leaves and mulberry based chow AS WELL AS dandelion leaves, grape vine leaves, and many other green leafy items, shaved carrot, etc
Carol5208- I'm confused...did you quote me to agree with my statement that superworms and meal worms do not cause impaction, or did you misread my comment and thought I said they do have a higher chance of causing impaction than other feeders?
Sandra, I just see it posted on here so much but do we really have proof of it? I mean how do you know that caused your chameleon to become impacted? Was it determined by a vet?. My one guy lived on them for quite awhile when he would eat nothing else(no I did not go the stravation route) and nothing never happened to him. So, are you saying even if you vary the diet with silks, crickets, hornworms etc, impaction can happen if you feed too many supers?