Gecko Newbie
New member
Hello gecko community! 
As you can see by my name, I am new to all this gecko stuff. I am a first grade teacher and was given 2 leopard geckos (one male - his name is Ironman because his original owner was a 6 year old boy, but I'm going to change it, just not sure to what yet... and one female - formally known as The Hulk but is now being called Lola). In true teacher fashion, I have been doing non-stop research about my new little creatures. My kids researched them and each one wrote a report about leopard geckos, so we do know a lot about how to care for them, but there are not a lot of things out there about "typical" behavior.
Originally, both geckos stayed in their respective hides (the male under a fairly open curved log hide, Lola inside this shell looking hide that completely hid her on the warm end). I figured it was A) because they're nocturnal and I'm only in my classroom during the day and/or B) they were hiding from the 25 faces peering into their home (with only whispering voices!). Then, they started coming out during the day - much to the kids delight. Lola just sat around, but the male climbed over his log and they both attacked the crickets put in the cage.
I'm on Spring Break, so I took them home. They were SUPER active - out and about a lot - and then I caught them mating...oops. NOW, Lola lays outside her hide (which I put moss in and made humid thinking it could double as nesting box) almost all day and sometimes it looks like the male is blocking her from going in there - he now spends ALL DAY in this hide which was originally her hide on the warm side and RARELY goes into his own on the cool side (I know they don't belong to each one, but...it seemed like they each had a preference before). PLUS, the male seems to not be eating much, while Lola is eating more AND visiting the little dish of calcium a bunch. She's also taken to sitting in the water dish (even though the humidity is at 50).
I DON'T want baby geckos, but can't afford another tank (yet) to separate them. I'm just worried that these "oops" babies - which, don't hate me, I was going to just take out of the tank and throw away because I can't afford to house/breed/feed baby geckos are going to hurt Lola because I'm not doing something for her - because I'm not prepared to be breeding geckos.... And the male seems so moody - though I know they don't really have emotions, but...I can't describe it any other way.
Is this stuff normal? Shouldn't Lola be hiding out waiting to lay her eggs? Is her little shell thing not a good enough nesting site and I need to give her a new one? (The 20 gallon tank will need to lose a hide if it's going to have a nest box...which do I take out - his or hers??) And how do I regulate their feeding when one is eating well and the other isn't - cause I hate having to catch the left over crickets! Why isn't the male just going along as usual - surely male geckos aren't affected by their female's hormonal changes like men are....??? :roll:
Sorry my story was so long! I felt it was important to give all the details.
Any advice is welcomed!!
As you can see by my name, I am new to all this gecko stuff. I am a first grade teacher and was given 2 leopard geckos (one male - his name is Ironman because his original owner was a 6 year old boy, but I'm going to change it, just not sure to what yet... and one female - formally known as The Hulk but is now being called Lola). In true teacher fashion, I have been doing non-stop research about my new little creatures. My kids researched them and each one wrote a report about leopard geckos, so we do know a lot about how to care for them, but there are not a lot of things out there about "typical" behavior.
Originally, both geckos stayed in their respective hides (the male under a fairly open curved log hide, Lola inside this shell looking hide that completely hid her on the warm end). I figured it was A) because they're nocturnal and I'm only in my classroom during the day and/or B) they were hiding from the 25 faces peering into their home (with only whispering voices!). Then, they started coming out during the day - much to the kids delight. Lola just sat around, but the male climbed over his log and they both attacked the crickets put in the cage.
I'm on Spring Break, so I took them home. They were SUPER active - out and about a lot - and then I caught them mating...oops. NOW, Lola lays outside her hide (which I put moss in and made humid thinking it could double as nesting box) almost all day and sometimes it looks like the male is blocking her from going in there - he now spends ALL DAY in this hide which was originally her hide on the warm side and RARELY goes into his own on the cool side (I know they don't belong to each one, but...it seemed like they each had a preference before). PLUS, the male seems to not be eating much, while Lola is eating more AND visiting the little dish of calcium a bunch. She's also taken to sitting in the water dish (even though the humidity is at 50).
I DON'T want baby geckos, but can't afford another tank (yet) to separate them. I'm just worried that these "oops" babies - which, don't hate me, I was going to just take out of the tank and throw away because I can't afford to house/breed/feed baby geckos are going to hurt Lola because I'm not doing something for her - because I'm not prepared to be breeding geckos.... And the male seems so moody - though I know they don't really have emotions, but...I can't describe it any other way.
Is this stuff normal? Shouldn't Lola be hiding out waiting to lay her eggs? Is her little shell thing not a good enough nesting site and I need to give her a new one? (The 20 gallon tank will need to lose a hide if it's going to have a nest box...which do I take out - his or hers??) And how do I regulate their feeding when one is eating well and the other isn't - cause I hate having to catch the left over crickets! Why isn't the male just going along as usual - surely male geckos aren't affected by their female's hormonal changes like men are....??? :roll:
Sorry my story was so long! I felt it was important to give all the details.