chloe924
Established Member
Hi all
I was wondering if anyone had any advice about de-stressing/ calming a chameleon after a traumatic event?
I’m a horrendous owner and accidentally stepped on my seven year old Panther on Monday. It was brief and not a lot of my weight, but I’ve definitely hurt and surprised him, so understandably he’s been highly defensive and fearful since. Which I feel sick to my stomach about!
I took him to the vet and while they didn't X-ray, they were happy with his checkup. They checked his breathing, grip strength, palpated his abdomen and felt along his ribs. Probably not the most thorough check, but honestly, unless he deteriorates, I can’t stand stressing the old man out more taking him back for anything further. His eyes aren't sunken in and are alert and unless I go close to the cage, his colours are their usual relaxed dull tones with no bruising.
So I was hoping for any and all advice I could get on how to make his recovery as smooth as possible please? & any warning signs to keep an eye out for.
I plan on keeping him in his cage for at least a week or two with no free range, giving his ribs a chance to heal if he has injured them. It’s the stress I worry about more though. Already he seems to hate me just a little less, but currently, he’s still terrified and will puff up if I go too close and try to hide behind his branches while not moving much.
Should I keep the front of his cage covered with a sheet so he can feel enclosed and safe? Avoid the room altogether? Or is sitting across the room & lower than him on the couch and otherwise ignoring him better? I know it's still early, but I've not been able to bribe him with his favourite food (silkworms) or water (He’s a freak of the species that loves drinking). So I'm freaking out and hoping to do the best for him. So sorry for the rambling rant!!
I've included a blurry zoomed-in photo from across the room. Unfortunately, his cage is a little sparse at the moment as his ivy isn't doing too well and I need to buy another to fill the gaps.
I was wondering if anyone had any advice about de-stressing/ calming a chameleon after a traumatic event?
I’m a horrendous owner and accidentally stepped on my seven year old Panther on Monday. It was brief and not a lot of my weight, but I’ve definitely hurt and surprised him, so understandably he’s been highly defensive and fearful since. Which I feel sick to my stomach about!
I took him to the vet and while they didn't X-ray, they were happy with his checkup. They checked his breathing, grip strength, palpated his abdomen and felt along his ribs. Probably not the most thorough check, but honestly, unless he deteriorates, I can’t stand stressing the old man out more taking him back for anything further. His eyes aren't sunken in and are alert and unless I go close to the cage, his colours are their usual relaxed dull tones with no bruising.
So I was hoping for any and all advice I could get on how to make his recovery as smooth as possible please? & any warning signs to keep an eye out for.
I plan on keeping him in his cage for at least a week or two with no free range, giving his ribs a chance to heal if he has injured them. It’s the stress I worry about more though. Already he seems to hate me just a little less, but currently, he’s still terrified and will puff up if I go too close and try to hide behind his branches while not moving much.
Should I keep the front of his cage covered with a sheet so he can feel enclosed and safe? Avoid the room altogether? Or is sitting across the room & lower than him on the couch and otherwise ignoring him better? I know it's still early, but I've not been able to bribe him with his favourite food (silkworms) or water (He’s a freak of the species that loves drinking). So I'm freaking out and hoping to do the best for him. So sorry for the rambling rant!!
I've included a blurry zoomed-in photo from across the room. Unfortunately, his cage is a little sparse at the moment as his ivy isn't doing too well and I need to buy another to fill the gaps.