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I’m doing the same with my female veiled and the rest. However, I only mist before bedtime and after waking up. Not during the night. The fogger runs from11.00pm till 06.00am for 15 mins every hour.I use a combo of fogging and misting throughout the night for my male veiled chameleon Cthulhu …
Does everyone move their fogger to cover their chameleon directly in the beam of the fog in the chameleons chosen sleeping spot du jour?
Or am I just a dork?
Everything I’ve read states veiled chameleons need 80-100% humidity through the night. I would consider that high?Keep in mind that veileds don’t need a high humidity like some species of chameleons. Personally, I wouldn’t fog and mist all through the night. I do a mist late evening after the lights are out and early morning before the lights come on.
That’s basically what we advice and during the day 40%Everything I’ve read states veiled chameleons need 80-100% humidity through the night. I would consider that high?
That was my impressionThat’s basically what we advice and during the day 40%
May I ask what source advised this? Everything I’m seeing seems to completely contradict thisKeep in mind that veileds don’t need a high humidity like some species of chameleons. Personally, I wouldn’t fog and mist all through the night. I do a mist late evening after the lights are out and early morning before the lights come on.
I think she meant no misting during the night and not continuously fogging, but in blocks of i.e. 15 mins per hour, each hour.May I ask what source advised this? Everything I’m seeing seems to completely contradict this
I mist close to lights off and lights on, and fog in between through the nightI’m doing the same with my female veiled and the rest. However, I only mist before bedtime and after waking up. Not during the night. The fogger runs from11.00pm till 06.00am for 15 mins every hour.
This is exactly the condescension I was talking about. Rude condescending communication doesn’t help my chameleon one bit but it seems to be a consistent priority for you. Enjoy hazing from your lofty perchI am not sure if it is worth me posting as you have ignored my feedback when I tried to explain UVB prior to you in great detail. But since you keep asking for detailed explanation here it goes.
Fogging is just another form of hydration. This is where people get confused. They see 80-100% for night time humidity and think this is required. If you are wanting to add hydration via fogging then yes higher humidity is needed with this method. But you also need airflow to avoid stagnant air that they are breathing in. When done improperly in temps too warm chams develop respiratory infections. Ideally you want temps to be low anyways at night. They need a good temp drop regardless of your chosen methods of hydration. This is an important health aspect of keeping chameleons. So if you are not achieving the low temps then you should not fog. Low temps that are ideal is 60-65. They say it is safe if temps are under 68 but I would still go for cooler temps then that for the simple fact you need the temp drop for them as this is actually a separate health need.
This is the thing about this hobby. Implementing things when you know parts and pieces is not always a safe thing. Fogging has become popular in the last few years. 5 years ago if you mentioned it then you were told you would kill your chameleon. This method is still evolving. You have to have all aspects running together. Which a lot of times means asking experienced members for advice. 9 times out of 10 new keepers will have missed something. For example your temps at night are not in the recommended range for a veiled chameleon. Night time recommendations are 55-65 F. So you take that and overlay it with fogging and they work together. But when you miss the temp requirement for the species and implement the fogging you have now created a hot humid environment. This not only raises risk of RI but raises risk of bacterial growth in the cage.
I want to mention there is such a thing as over hydrating a chameleon with fogging. It very rarely gets talked about. There is not a lot known on it other than it is another extreme and leaders in the hobby do not recommend it, but it can happen easily when you are blasting them with fog. Their urates go from having a form to being pure liquid.
Jannb keeps her chams very differently. All are free ranged. Her method of hydration is misting and a dripper running during the day. This is another way to properly keep a veiled and provide hydration. So she does not fog and therefor does not boost night time humidity to the extreme levels those do with fogging. You will find with certain things in this hobby there are multiple ways to achieve the same goals. Hydration is a big one that has multiple methods along with methods changing based on cage type, temps, and even your ambient household levels.
In your threads you seem to get frustrated and I have to say this is not the way in this hobby. It is ever changing and the information and recommendations change with it. It becomes a situation like having a job where you are constantly learning to keep up. If you are looking at old sites or even old threads they are not going to line up with the current line of thinking. In the last 5 years husbandry has evolved quite a bit. Larger cage recommendations, all live plants, hydration methods, UVB information and equipment, supplement guidelines, bioactive set ups, and Female specific care to reduce clutch size are just a few that I have seen dramatically change in the last 6 years since I have been in the forum. Having an open mind and listening to keepers that have the experience will give you the information you need to form an entire picture of what your husbandry should be to provide the best for your chameleon.
Ps if you had just shown me the pic of the lamp that said shade dweller on it (as I later shared once I realized it) it would have been MUCH CLEARER than your lengthy yet still ambitious condescending lamp “explanation”This is exactly the condescension I was talking about. Rude condescending communication doesn’t help my chameleon one bit but it seems to be a consistent priority for you. Enjoy hazing from your lofty perch
This is exactly the condescension I was talking about. Rude condescending communication doesn’t help my chameleon one bit but it seems to be a consistent priority for you. Enjoy hazing from your lofty perch
And this is exactly why you will struggle in this hobby, because you are not open to feedback or clarifying information. I have been nothing but nice to you sharing valuable information each time I have attempted to help you. Not to mention spending quite a bit of time doing so. But that still is not good enough for you. This is why I have avoided every other post you have done since your shade dweller one which again you did not want to listen to me telling you it was a shade dweller set up.Ps if you had just shown me the pic of the lamp that said shade dweller on it (as I later shared once I realized it) it would have been MUCH CLEARER than your lengthy yet still ambitious condescending lamp “explanation”
Who cares how quickly people need the info to take proper care of their new love… what’s more important is your ego OBVIOUSLY