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how can I reduce the heat? I am using a low watt blue day heat lamp.The basking is too hot. I can’t help with anything else @JacksJill @Kaizen
You need a regular incandescent household bulb wattage depends most use 60-75 some 100 as long as it provides the correct temps so you can play around with the wattages. Like @ Beman said can we see pictures of the enclosure lights, basking bulb included. I’m pretty sure that’s the wrong basking bulb. Hopefully a Jackson’s owner will reply soon.how can I reduce the heat? I am using a low watt blue day heat lamp.
You need a white light bulb, household incandescent bulbs work great and are cheap! Use the minimum wattage required to get the correct temps. What are your ambient temps?how can I reduce the heat? I am using a low watt blue day heat lamp.
Usually, this happens when the lighting is incorrect (either basking bulb, uvb, or both). To reduce your basking spot temperature, either lift up your basking bulb up off of the screen or get a bulb with a lower wattage. To raise up my basking lights, I created a pvc structure that I can drill into as opposed to drilling into the ceiling (I'll post pics below). Others, like mentioned before, get a lower wattage bulb and readjust the basking branch. 90 degrees is way too hot for a jacksons, or any chameleon for that matter. If your ambient is between 70-75F, then I might try going with a 45-watt incandescent. Make sure you buy a true 45-watt and not a 45-watt equivalent.So I juvenile male Jackson chameleon who insists on climbing in the screen of his enclosure and I can't figure out why he isn't comfortable. He has plenty of places to hide, basking temps are 85-90 degrees
Typically a range between 30%-50% humidity is recommended during the day and up to 100% at night. Your humidity range seems to fit this close enough that I wouldn't worry about daytime levels. What levels are you getting at night?with an ambient of 70-75, humidity goes up and down all day from 35-60%.
So night time temps never get over 60 degrees.Exactly temps are 80-85 for basking no hotter. What temp drop are you getting at night?
Take a picture of the enclosure lights down for us... There may be other issues besides being way too hot.
Fogging for 8 hours is more than enough. Many members on here, including myself, wait to start fogging the cage until midnight or 1 a.m when the temps are coolest. You can start the humidifier sooner, or you can wait to turn it on when you are getting ready to go to sleep if you don't have a timer. Though I do mist the cage for a minute when the lights go out to start increasing the humidity.Here is the enclosure. I use a t5 UVB lamp and a 6% UVB. I swapped the heat bulb out for a 45-watt incandescent bulb. I also bought a fogger for night time so night humidity is pretty high, 85-100%. The only problem is the reservoir only holds enough water for 8 hours.
Thank you so much! I have a timer I can put the fogger on so it will turn on around midnight.Fogging for 8 hours is more than enough. Many members on here, including myself, wait to start fogging the cage until midnight or 1 a.m when the temps are coolest. You can start the humidifier sooner, or you can wait to turn it on when you are getting ready to go to sleep if you don't have a timer. Though I do mist the cage for a minute when the lights go out to start increasing the humidity.
You can also try wrapping the sides of the enclosure with something like a shower curtain which will make the humidifier more effective so you don't have to have it on full blast if you don't want it to.
When would it (fog machine) typically turn off if started around midnight/1am?Thank you so much! I have a timer I can put the fogger on so it will turn on around midnight.
I just set it to stop at 8 am which is when his lights come onWhen would it (fog machine) typically turn off if started around midnight/1am?
You use incandescent bulbs, right?For juveniles under 9 months I keep the basking temps below 80. I use 40 or 50 watt bulbs and they aren't on constantly. Mine come on a hour after the UVB for a couple hours and then on and off during the day but off 1 hour before the UVB. They like more heat than is good for them.
Screen climbing is a juvenile behavior. You can offer them more branches but ultimately they just have to outgrow it.
I use 40 watt incandescents.
Perfect heat and no chance of burns, either.
If you plan on keeping Chameleons for a while, I suggest you STOCKPILE some incandescent bulbs.
They're not being manufactured much any more and are already very hard to find.