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So the green wire is the twist ties? That is a lot of twist ties, what are they securing?It’s so the twist tie won’t poke him
All of the wood and vinesSo the green wire is the twist ties? That is a lot of twist ties, what are they securing?
Turn off the lights. Ambient room temp is fine for a chameleon at night.What should I do for the night then
When I replace the red lightsWhat should I do for the night then
This is my final. I changed the lights and added 3 plants with 1 more coming. I think he’ll really love it. Tell me if I should change anything. Thanks for all your help.Pictures please.
More like 10 on average, plus other insects.Also how many crickets should I give him a day I’m pretty sure it’s 3 or 4 for a baby Cham which is what I have
Should I leave 1 red in?When I replace the red lights
Sorry if I came off that way, but I am talking about if you don't do your research, or don't pay attention. I made a really nice bioactive enclosure for some tinctorius dart frogs, and then, like an idiot, I read the bag of sand (I made a tropical soil mix with part play sand) and it contained crystalline silica, and I had to throw everything out. So it was a lot of work, and expensive. Coco fiber is an unnatural substrate, it is not like soil. It can cause impaction easily, versus different soil, chameleons evolved in the wild to eat dirt to get nutrients, if they died from it, why would they still do it? I'm pretty sure Mr. John Courtney Smith said that.@CJ's Exotics how are they an insane amount of work? I have 3 panthers(2 males, 1 female) kept in XL reptibreezes ATM with bioactive substrate. I have 1 male panther in a dragonstrand atrium with substrate, and my parson's will be kept bioactively when he goes into his forever enclose. I literally do nothing, but empty the drainage lol. As for coco fiber being unnatural and causing impaction, whaaat, where are you getting this from? it's no different than swallowing a lot of other fibrous particles. eating mouthfuls of it wouldn't be good, but a bit here and there isn't going to do anything to a healthy animal. The same way it wouldn't do anything to you if you ate it. I'm not trying to attack you because I have said similar things in the past, but it really all just stems from BS myths people pass around because someone had a dehydrated chameleon eat a pile of dirt which caused impaction and death... Anyway for now, i do recommend the OP remove the stuff at the bottom and gain an understanding of what the fancy *bioactive* word means(nothing that special) before adding substrate. as mentioned above, a great place to start if interested, is listening to everything by John-Courtney Smith, he also has a book. The man has studied this stuff extensively and swears by it.
I highly recommend to everyone interested, give proper bio substrate a try, it'll make life so much easier. I can't even find cham poop with how fast it's cleaned up these days.
Change them to standard white incandescent lights that you would use for your home (in appropriate wattage).Should I leave 1 red in?