Dude, I'd feel horrible for keeping an adult in a 6 qt tub. At least needs to be 15qt.
I feel bad for having to do this as well.
I suppose that some people would answer yes to this question, I on the other hand do not think so. It is a matter of opinion.
Mainly because you gave out untrue information.
Why say my advice is bad (assumed when you quoted me) and then turn around and say the same thing I said.
Mainly because you gave out untrue information. I did not say the same thing you said.
I can give my leo poison.
I can feed them insects from outside.
I can feed only once a month.
I can put them on calcisand.
I can hold them by their tail.
I can poke them with a knife.
I can kill them.
Does it mean I SHOULD????!!!
Depends on what results you are looking for, I can think of several reasons to give my leopard geckos poison (internal parasites). Or to kill them (it is called euthanasia) when they are beyond all hope.
Think before you quote my ass next time.
I always think when quoting someone, I will take particular care in quoting you in the future. I did not intend to harm your ego, only to inform you that you were very wrong on that particular point.
ESPECIALLY when it involves hyposhawn, someone who will take advice and do what you say. He doesn't need someone telling him the minimum, he needs it not mentioned to him at all.
You lost every shred of respect with this statement.
He needs to be told the correct way, not the half ass way.
The fact of the matter is that there is not a single correct way, each leopard gecko is as different as you or I, our very basic needs are similar but not exactly the same. I don't consider my methods of care to be at all half measures by any means, in fact I believe them to be far above the average.
For the sake of keeping things in context:
You can breed leopard geckos in those 15qt. tubs, you can breed them in 6qt. tubs for that matter, but should not do so out of consideration for the quality of life the geckos should have under your care.
This is fact, pure and simple.
I had to move a large number of leopard geckos to a 6qt. hatchling rack, had many of the females bred within a month, and lay viable eggs. This is far from normal operations for me but I just wanted to lay down the facts.
I should add that my house flooded and destroyed everything below 3'. My decision to move the leopard geckos to the hatchling racks was an emergency measure not one of space conservation or of being cheap.
I am switching from plastic tubs to ½ - 29 Aquariums (30 x 12½ x 6) by glasscages.com for my leopard geckos. I feel the switch will be well worth it, mainly because for some time I have been just caring for a bunch of leopard geckos and enjoying nothing but the blank face of a bunch of tubs.
The switch will take me two years to complete, as I am going from very utilitarian to a more naturalistic method of care and have on the order of 84 leopard gecko enclosures to outfit.
Maurice Pudlo
My usual leopard gecko bin is the 28qt sterilite container. It is my opinion that anything smaller is unfit for use as leopard gecko housing. Nearly all of my leopard geckos are back in such containers, the few that are not will be within a week, possibly two at most.
Maurice Pudlo