saltwaterguy02
New Member
Is it ok to mist a chameleon and plants with Pedialyte mixed with water? It seems to be leaving a slight coat of glossiness on the leaves.
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Why do you have Pedilyte in your mister?
If you do post, why not just post something useful?
Its a messy way to get pedialyte to your chams, you might have better results with an eye dropper or a syringe with no needle. You can also use the stream on the sprayer to shoot gently onto the chams tongue while he laps up the water.
i think what he posted was quite useful, so i will post it again but in a way you might understand.
why would you give your chams pedialyte? for a treat because of the sugar? or to hydrate them when they are dehydrated?
im not exactly catching why one might give them this, and i imagine misting them with it would leave the sugars on their skin witch would possibly attract free range crix to bite the cham and cause further problems apart from one you might be trying to treat with this
i see this time and time again, and i cant help but wonder why people are compelled to mist with pedialyte? i can say with a fair degree of certainty that no cham in the wild has ever become dehydrated or failed to get rehydrated because of a lack of pedialyte , what ever happened to clean water? anything other than clean water carries with it an increased chance of eye problems if nothing else (including vitamin and mineral water). (preferably filtered if not distilled, household water is chlorinated and usually has a high concentration of copper) letting your water sit for 24 hrs will disipate any chlorine . jmo
In the United State Pedialyte is used to treat humans and animals for dehydration. I forgot people from outside the US might not know of this product. Other than that is quite obvious what he's asking. Sugar coating a chameleon to attract free range crickets is sarcastic and highly unlikely.
yes, that is true, but it is meant to use internally, not topically , plus pedialyte contains dextrose and fructose, the smaller an animals weight, the more these ingredients are of a concern, using it for babies, people or horses is one thing, chameleons is another (even a baby has a hundred times the body weight of most chams). im not saying it has zero application for chams but, it should always be used cautiously , conservatively, and never topically. the best thing to rehydrate a sick cham is clean water and good husbandry practices, if they had an abundance of them 2 things to begin with, in all likelyhood, they wouldnt need rehydrating./ jmoIf your cham is severly dehydrated and not eating, Pedilyte is used to replace electrolytes that every living thing has. It is not meant to use regularly, but only in severe cases. It has boosted my cham back to drinking on it's own the one time I "had" to use it. Also if your cham is sick, it can aid in helping them along.