Gecko Ranch
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My camera is apparently complete garbage...soooooooo as soon I get ahold of a decent one I'll get some pics. :biggrin:
Sounds good! :lol:
My camera is apparently complete garbage...soooooooo as soon I get ahold of a decent one I'll get some pics. :biggrin:
Whether he/she sells the stuff or not is not helpful to me in anyway...
I think keeping it clean is good, if he can still eat insects you are good, you should also try feeding him some Repashy MRP diet, either the Crested Gecko Diet or two-part food. If he does not show improvement or deteriorates in the next few weeks then do seek a herp vet. There are tons in Florida, which wild tokays do roam although they are not native!
I'm with Cliff on the Crested Gecko diet. Once you do get a Tokay 'hooked' on all the 'sugar', it' usually will not go back to crickets or roaches. And they just get really fat and may not breed.
Tokay are not omnivores, they are carnivores and should be feed accordingly.
As for the broken jaw, ....
Broken jaws are difficult to impossible to set but oral antibiotics, pain and inflammation meds which are available from any vet will help the Tokay heal faster. And yes, it is a long recovery.
If he/she stops eating then get a packet of Ox Bow Carnivore Care™ which is a premium recovery food which can be given to carnivores/Tokay with poor nutritional status resulting from illness or surgery. Most vets carry this as well.
Please spend some time reading through some of the older threads on this forum. This will help with husbandry and stress reduction. Meal worms, for instance, are very poor in nutrition. Quality gut loaded crickets or roach are much better.
Good luck and all the best,
Michael's Tokay Hoard @ www.billewicz.com
I would think that one of the zoo grade insectivore chows would be more closely matched nutritionally than the carnivore which is made for animals that eat mostly other mammals and not insects. I don't know that it would really matter one way or another for short term care like a few days. But it seems as though it could make a great deal of difference for long term care with something like a broken jaw.




FYI: The Ox Bow product, (Oxbow Animal Health | Carnivore Care?) is exactly what Dr. Scott Stahl, (SEAVS.com - Stahl Exotic Animal Veterinary Services) and I'm to understand, most reptile vets use to feed long term convalescing reptiles. The product was developed for zoos and vets and is only available from a veterinarian.
The Tokay with a broken lower jaw that he set and splinted was on this product for 4 months before her jaw was strong enough to tackle live insects again. She is healthy alive, well and breeding today.