Thank you for all of your education! Three weeks ago I brought home a juvenile panther chameleon (I named him Topaz) after custom building the habitat. It has been such a joy to learn everything I can and fall in love with panthers. When I found your channel last week I was thrilled! I love learning more from your videos!!
Thank you Bill for the videos and ur absolutely right if ur looking for the male spend the extra couple hundred dollars and buy responsibly ...thanks again for all u do
Helmeted chameleons are a wonderful species. I do have one male, but am breeding too many other species to add another one to that list! But I have before and they are a great species to work with!
@@marierollins8804 they can be kept much like Jackson’s Chameleons so you can use those care sheets. Here is a link to caring for live-bearer babies that also describes the birthing process. chameleonacademy.com/trioceros-jacksonii-breeding-jacksons-chameleons/
We are challenged to try and find that balance when we feed primarily nocturnal insects (crickets, roaches, beetle larvae,...) When we start feeding diurnal insects we start finding more calcium. Also, we supplement much more than necessary. But we haven't figured out where that line is so we keep doing it. We could certainly figure out how little calcium we actually had to give, but there would have to be a group of breeders willing to experiment with reducing calcium. But chances are slim that you would get a concerted effort towards that because there is no health problem with how much calcium we give. So that test is low priority!
You are great I really want to own a channel lion when I'm ready, so thank you very much for egg information, it sounds like an adventure!😃
Thank you for all of your education! Three weeks ago I brought home a juvenile panther chameleon (I named him Topaz) after custom building the habitat. It has been such a joy to learn everything I can and fall in love with panthers. When I found your channel last week I was thrilled! I love learning more from your videos!!
I am glad you are enjoying the outreach! Thank you for letting me know!
Awesome video! Looking forward to the rest of the series
Thank you Bill for the videos and ur absolutely right if ur looking for the male spend the extra couple hundred dollars and buy responsibly ...thanks again for all u do
Great info as always my friend.
Would u consider getting and breeding helmeted chameleons? I recently got a pair of them and I am completely in love!
Helmeted chameleons are a wonderful species. I do have one male, but am breeding too many other species to add another one to that list! But I have before and they are a great species to work with!
@@ChameleonAcademy could u give me a care sheet or some tips to caring for baby helmeted chameleons? I was told my female is pregnant.
@@marierollins8804 they can be kept much like Jackson’s Chameleons so you can use those care sheets. Here is a link to caring for live-bearer babies that also describes the birthing process. chameleonacademy.com/trioceros-jacksonii-breeding-jacksons-chameleons/
@@ChameleonAcademy Thank u so much
Question unrelated to the video. What do bugs eat or do in the wild that makes up for calcium dusting in captivity?
We are challenged to try and find that balance when we feed primarily nocturnal insects (crickets, roaches, beetle larvae,...) When we start feeding diurnal insects we start finding more calcium. Also, we supplement much more than necessary. But we haven't figured out where that line is so we keep doing it. We could certainly figure out how little calcium we actually had to give, but there would have to be a group of breeders willing to experiment with reducing calcium. But chances are slim that you would get a concerted effort towards that because there is no health problem with how much calcium we give. So that test is low priority!