Special needs gecko?

Elizabeth Freer

Well-known member
the air temps drop, but the ground temp inside the dry hide stays the same.

he completely ignores the crickets and mealworms now :(

Perhaps he is bored with crickets and mealies?

Any chance of ordering very small hornworms, silkworms, genuine Phoenix worms, or perhaps Blaptica dubia?
 
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swanguin

New member
That is always a possibility, I've been looking for other insects in my country but with no results :( do you know where can I buy them online that ships to Central America?
 

Elizabeth Freer

Well-known member
That is always a possibility, I've been looking for other insects in my country but with no results :( do you know where can I buy them online that ships to Central America?

Sorry, I don't know.

Are any types of c ockroaches found in Central America?
 

swanguin

New member
the common ones that are a pest in homes :p but they are usually too big

Ill post a picture of my gecko, i want to know if you guys think he's too skinny.
 

swanguin

New member
what are the risks of catching wild insects to feed my leo?
 

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Conched

New member
If you are catching them from an area where you feel certain there are no pesticides being used it should be o.k.

Be careful what insects you collect for them. Stay away from anything that is fuzzy or has pinchers, no centipedes or millepedes.

You should be able to find some crickets and locusts, so start with that. If you are not sure what the insect is than don't collect it until you research it.

By the way, nice looking Leo.

Good luck.
 

Completeleopard

New member
Your Leo looks fine weight wise, could do with putting on a bit more weight bit its not underweight.

As Conched says, just make sure what your picking up hasn't eaten anything bad, insecticide, poison etc . Nothing that could harm your gecko either (hairy insects etc)
 

cricket4u

New member
[Am not up-to-date with this thread.]

Perhaps he is bored with crickets and mealies?

Any chance of ordering very small hornworms, silkworms, genuine Phoenix worms, or perhaps Blaptica dubia?

They will get bored of one insect fed consecutively, however not refuse 2 different insects. I suspect something is wrong, perhaps housing related. I have to wonder why he is laying out in the open space? or did you remove a hide for the photo?

This is why I asked for a picture of the entire enclosure?

Enclosure dimensions (length x width x heighth): the normal 10 gallons one You need a longer cage that will allow a proper temp gradient. Also a UTH alone will not provide proper heating. Some days the air temp will be too cold. An overhead heat source in such a small area can easily overheat the tank. I would upgrade this immediately. Some leos are just less tolerant to improper temperatures than others. Just in case you are wondering why one will eat and not the other.

Many times people just increase the UTH temp which then causes other issues. The leo lives in the humidity hide(noticed large puddles of water in pictures of feces) or you will see them laying half their body inside trying to get heat and half their body (head and front limbs) hanging out the hide because it gets too hot. Make sure you have 2 thermometers to compare for accuracy.

Just a reminder, my leos do not always like to lay on hot surfaces, especially while sleeping. They will move to the hide that has warm air temps, no UTH in that specific hide. What they really prefer, is a warm surface out in the open at night. This is once the leo is comfortable with their environment.
 
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swanguin

New member
I am getting a larger wood terrarium (he seems to get extremely confused with a glass one) my temps are fine at the moment, but it is harder to keep them that way in a small terrarium.

Those are shadows, not puddles :) I did remove the hide to take the picture.
 

swanguin

New member
heres the terrarium, view from top and from the front.
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on the left bottom corner, its the cool dry hide, then water dish. On the right side, bottom corner is the dry warm hide and next to it, the moist one. I added some stairs cause he likes to climb. :)
 

swanguin

New member
He still hasn't eaten :( I'm thinking it might be the size of the crickets. The crickets aren't bigger than his head, but they are way bigger than the ones I've been giving him. So maybe he is intimidated by them?
 

swanguin

New member
I tried with the smaller crickets and he ignored them :( I think I should take him to the vet and have him checked for everything
 

Cymmie

New member
I haven't read through the whole thread and I may just be pushing another reptile's habits onto another's but have you tried any other feeders besides crickets and meal worms? Sometimes with my other reptiles I've realized they get bored with the same kind of feeder over and over? Or is he still trying to strike at the crickets and missing? If he's showing absolutely no interest you could try something like a roach or a silkworm?
 
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