I appologise if I've misread your tone...
Ok I have already pre-planned everything and this tank I really don't plan to put too many geckos in but I was exploring my options. I do understand about how I need to separate the offspring until they are at least breeding size (somewhere around 40 grams for males and more near 50 for females) and separate any males from females as to prevent pre-mature breeding.
Depending on genetics and how you've raised your geckos since they were hatchlings (or unless you bought them this way) many won't even REACH the 50g mark. There are certain ideals, and I like to have my geckos around the 45g mark, but the known breeding weight is 30-35 grams, it's not really a debate, it's a fact... You can breed yours at whichever weight you see fit, but that is the weight at which it's healthy to begin breeding your females.
I know this, I research everything I undergo.
I'm glad you do your research, but going by the conclusion you came to about the weights, that tells me you havnt checked out many different sources... which is part of doing the propper research.
I have never bred any animal, though, and being that I would like to eventually pursue a career involving keeping animals particularly herps I think it would be a good experience for me to do this. I have spoken to other crested gecko breeders and they say cresteds are a good animal to start breeding as they have small clutch sizes and aren't "in excess" as other animals are in the hobby..
That's awesome that you want to begin breeding them though, I find that they are a lot of fun. They would be a good gecko to start off with, but you won't get very far asking for people's input if you argue or reply rudely to almost every point they make. As you can probably see from our signature...we have many reptiles, and I specialize in cresties... so it's possible that I know what I'm talking about...
I also think this tank will work nicely, obviously not for 20 geckos but for more like 8 or so it will be quite nice. I mean, it is taller than some of the exo-terra tanks and geckos are widely kept in those.
You're right, for 8 or so geckos that tank would probably work... as long as it was set up properly, I was just saying that with a lot of geckos in one enclosure, they definitely prefer the vertical space. I use exo-terras for all my cresties, but my males are housed by themselves, unless they have a female in with them to breed, & my females are housed a few to a larger tank. I do get your point about how your enclosure is taller than the regular exo-terra... but my concern was just the amount of geckos you were planning on putting in something of that height.
So back to my main point. When you say it is done a lot in the hobby, do you mean it is done a lot in the hobby by the more knowledgeable people in the hobby or it is done in the hobby by people "lower" in the hobby in a sense? Is it rejected by a lot, or do some of the greatest breeders do it? I want whats best for the geckos. I am definitely not new to keeping reptiles and am just getting into cresties. I appreciate your advice. Thanks.
It's most definitely done by some of the (in my opinion)best and most knowledgeable breeders. It's extremely common. It's more a moral thing... but I've yet to see someone get cut up on a forum for breeding offspring back to a parent. I'd suggest bringing in new blood every once in a while if you plan on building up a breeding group this way... but other than that I havn't seen many issues about it. Hopefully some more people will add their opinions to this post aswell.
Again, I appologise if I misread your tone in your last post, but it came off rather ignorant to me.
-Deb