Jester
New member
Hey guys so my Leopard Gecko has pooped 1 time in the last week but she still readily accepts food and is quite active. When I hold her, her stomach seems firmer than normal, and I was just wondering if carrying eggs will make them stop defecating.
I don't think it is because she is impacted because about 6 months ago she was living on sand and didn't have a very balanced diet of just crickets, and they were a little to big for her which I learned from the vet. She pulled though and since then I kept her on paper towels up until 2-3 weeks ago when I finally got up the courage to put her back in a natural looking setup.
I have been feeding her baby meal worms, and smaller crickets, also because I didn't want to risk it. When I do feed her now, i feed her meal worms in a dish and crickets in a separate container to reduce the chance of substrate ingestion.
Here's the curve ball the vet couldn't quite determine if it was impaction caused by sand and crickets or possibly her trying to lay an egg, but she was egg bound. I wanted to know if she was egg bound once she was more likely to become egg bound a second time? The last time I had to take her to the vet it cost a little over $1000.00 and I would of course take her again if it was necessary, but with these times I don't have that kind of money just laying around, and I would like to minimize the stress of transportation and weird ppl on her as much as possible.
Finally, could she maybe just not be laying simply because there isn't a dedicated lay box in her vivarium? If that's the case, what can I buy/make for her to possibly help her out?
Any and all help is welcome
Thanks in advance
-Jester
I don't think it is because she is impacted because about 6 months ago she was living on sand and didn't have a very balanced diet of just crickets, and they were a little to big for her which I learned from the vet. She pulled though and since then I kept her on paper towels up until 2-3 weeks ago when I finally got up the courage to put her back in a natural looking setup.
I have been feeding her baby meal worms, and smaller crickets, also because I didn't want to risk it. When I do feed her now, i feed her meal worms in a dish and crickets in a separate container to reduce the chance of substrate ingestion.
Here's the curve ball the vet couldn't quite determine if it was impaction caused by sand and crickets or possibly her trying to lay an egg, but she was egg bound. I wanted to know if she was egg bound once she was more likely to become egg bound a second time? The last time I had to take her to the vet it cost a little over $1000.00 and I would of course take her again if it was necessary, but with these times I don't have that kind of money just laying around, and I would like to minimize the stress of transportation and weird ppl on her as much as possible.
Finally, could she maybe just not be laying simply because there isn't a dedicated lay box in her vivarium? If that's the case, what can I buy/make for her to possibly help her out?
Any and all help is welcome
Thanks in advance
-Jester