Showing posts with label Toothless. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toothless. Show all posts

Thursday, February 6, 2014

THIS is why Reptiles MUST HAVE UVB lights!!!


THIS is why reptiles MUST HAVE UVB!!!!!!!!!

This 1 year old iguana is on my way to my house. THIS is what happened when careless, clueless, irresponsible, or lazy reptile owners don't do their research with their reptiles.

THIS is Metabolic Bone Disease. THIS is a living hell for this iguana. I can get him healthy again, but he will never ever be normal.



Without a UVB light, this iggy's body couldn't process calcium. So his body started to rob his bones of calcium and his body became more and more bent & distorted. MBD is reversible but the effects are not.



This is an X-Ray of my little buddy Toothless' hips. He had MBD for a short amount of time before I got him and treated him. Even though he is healthy now, he will always have a severely bent spine. He will always drag one leg and eventually this will shorten his life. All because his first owners didn't have a good UVB light and give his growing body extra calcium.


Saturday, January 18, 2014

Beardies Loving their Blankies!

Nubs has loved warm corn bags since I first got him 

"A picture? Really? I want to go to sleep!"

This was her first time on a corn bag and she loved it! 

All ready for bed!

Gem in the sun with his blankie

Toothless with his buggy blankie

He has a small blankie since he's so tiny still 

Monday, November 25, 2013

LOVE these two pictures!

Nope, no one here except us chicks!

She's so cool looking!

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Beardie Roll Call or Our House feels Slightly Empty

Toothless

Spike

Max

Hurley (who is leaving Monday)

SweetPea- the lone female

Our boy named Lizzie

Down to only 6. Raji got adopted out last night. Yeah! All the others have gone home or been adopted. Dr Folland was teasing me that if I'm down to 8, I'd better load up! ;) I think we're okay with just a few for now.

P.S. taking pics of the beardies in their tanks showed me how dirty the glass has gotten! whoops! Time to wipe some glass down.

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Quick Update

Nigel went home and is doing GREAT! Yeah!

Volcano went to a great home today! Yeah!

Nubs goes home on Monday! Yeah!


Raji is still available for adoption. Tiny Tim is eating, but his eyes are still bad and his shell is still soft. Spike's tubes are working and I've been able to get a lot of pus out of his beard in the last two days. Hurley will be headed home next month too (been babysitting him).

And I honestly don't think I'm strong enough to give up Toothless. Several have offered. I don't think I can do it. I think he'll have to stay. Maybe one day if the perfect home comes along.... until then, I am as close to perfect as you can get for my little buddy. He's my "Toofers." He came to me at 60-something grams. He's now 99 grams. I can't wait for him to be over 100!

He played on my bed tonight before snuggling in my hoodie & falling asleep

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Hard Choices

Originally I started off with 1 beardie, Lizzie. Then a friend asked me to take her 2 special beardies, Max & SweetPea. The other beardies came and went, but these three always stayed. Then Toothless came to me and I fell in love with him.


Every night he snuggles into my shirt and sleeps. He's the sweetest, nicest, cutest beardie ever. Which makes him totally & completely easy to place. He stole my heart and I decided to keep him.

Then Spike came back to me. Spike has been bounced around so many times in his life that I hate to do it again. But every beardie that stays takes up space, making it harder for me to take in future needier beardies.


So I'm contemplating finding a good home for Toothless, knowing how much joy he could bring to someone else and knowing it would free me up to take on the harder cases that no one else wants. If you think you could adore Toothless the way I do and snuggle with him and love him and carry him around in your shirt at night, please let me know and I'll think about it. :) I can't promise I'll adopt him out, but I will consider other homes.

Friday, August 30, 2013

Sun Time!

My favorite vet, Dr Doug Folland, likes to say that the single best thing you can do for your reptile is to give it sun time. Especially this time of the year when it is warm outside, sun time is a great way to make your beardies healthy.

I have two males, Max & Spike, who have their own cages outside, and they both believe they should NEVER have to be inside in a tank. As soon as the sun rises past my neighbor's trees, I take my big boys outside and they spend the day in the sun/shade.


Their set ups are simple: a rat/guinea pig cage with leftover pieces of astroturf on the floor. Max's cage has a shelf on it; Spike's cage has a tree branch. I use astroturf or reptile carpet to cover part of the top of the cage so there is always shade.

Today I put my old parakeet cage on the table on it's back so I could sun Toothless for awhile. Because he's so small, he could fit through the bars on the other cages. A parakeet cage is perfect. He has a rock to perch on.

When these guys are outside, I check them hourly to make sure they have sun & shade. In the heat of the day (between noon and 3) when the sun is at its highest, I put up my patio umbrella and position it so it shades their whole cages. Even with the umbrella up, they get plenty of heat and UVB reflection. Also when it is hot, I'll spray down the astroturf with a water bottle to keep them from overheating.


Upstairs in our south facing window is Lizzie. He's the little bump on the right side of the window. The window filters out the UVB light, but he still enjoys have the sun & warmth.


Downstairs in our south facing window is SweetPea. She is too timid to be outside, but she loves being on the window ledges in the sun. Here her head is up, but most of the time she looks like this:



So here's my helpful hints for outside sun time:

1-- NEVER EVER EVER use a glass tank. You will kill your reptile quickly!! Use an old bird/ferret/rat/small animal cage.

2-- Check on your beardies hourly to make sure they have plenty of sun & shade. Put them in a location where they won't be bothered by neighborhood animals.

3-- Windows filter out UVB (that's their job) so the only natural UVA & UVB light is direct sunlight. So get them outside when it's warm or consider opening up your windows when it's not as hot.

4-- Always keep water in their cages. When they spend a lot of sun outside, bathe/soak them more often to keep their hydration levels up.

5-- Beardies like the heat. It may be too hot for you, but it is perfect for them. In the wild, beardies sun themselves in temps up to 110 degrees. As long as they have both sun and shade and water, they should be fine with the heat. But that goes back to rule number 2-- check them a lot. If they are gaping consistently, or hiding, or trying to get out, it may be time to move them back to their tanks.

6-- Start off small. Try 30 minutes a day until they get used to being outside. SweetPea is too freaked out by alone outside time. She'll stay with me on my lap, but can't handle being outside. Most other beardies will adjust quickly to being outside with new sights & smells & sounds. But you can build them up. Until you are sure they can handle the new environment, give them short segments of time during the day (maybe once in the morning and once in the afternoon).


Anything else? Leave a comment below!

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Finally! Some Sunshine!

It's been cloudy here for the past four or five days (totally abnormal for the summer) and my animals have missed being in the sun.

Thankfully, the beardies can share the window space if I use the "beardie barrier" I made out of corrugated plastic. Here's SweetPea and Toothless side by side. Toothless is fine with SweetPea, but she attempted to eat him last time they were near each other. So they are under my watchful care always.


Thursday, August 8, 2013

Sleeping Beardies

There's something heartwarming to me about having a beardie sleep on me. I love it! I don't feel a sense of connection to them until I can snuggle with them. So most of my "selfies" pics are of me with beardies in my shirt. :)

Here's Toothless. She had a good day-- she stayed outside for 30 minutes, got some liquid calcium, ate 4 calcium-coated crickets, ran around my living room, and then went to sleep in my shirt. :)

Toothless


Squiggy

Bitsy Stubbs

Sydney

SweetPea

SweetPea

Um....? Can't tell. Maybe Squiggy?

Thor

Nigel, myvery first rescue 

Bath Time-- a Weekly Must for Adult Beardies

Adult beardies need a bath *at least* once a week so they have an opportunity to drink and to poop. Once they get used to the bath, they will do both of things without fail.

Juvenile beardies (over 6 months) need a bath a couple times a week. It's best to not bathe baby beardies because they can't handle the temperature changes.

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Bath water should be warm, but not hot! Don't burn them. It's not supposed to be a sauna. Be sure to add  more warm water if they are in the bath for a long time.

Most beardies will involuntarily puff up with air when the get into water; it's a survival instinct to keep them afloat. Don't worry about it.

Some beardies like to swim around and play; some don't. If they like to swim, let them swim. My older three beardies got in tonight, got a drink, and then wanted out.

A beardie who has had a lot to drink will have a very full belly! Don't squeeze them too hard or they will spit the water back up.

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For new beardies who aren't used to baths, I dip my fingers in the water and dribble it on their noses to make them drink. It may take a few drops, but usually they will start opening their mouths and licking up the water. You can keep doing that until they stop licking or you can gently coax their mouths down toward the water so they can drink directly. Once my beardies learn to lap up the water themselves, I don't even have to dribble water on their noses-- they do it immediately.

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If they poop in the water, then bath time is over. Don't let them drink the poopy water. If they haven't had anything to drink, drain the water, wash out the sink, refill the water, and put them back in.

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Once my beardies have bathed, I wrap them in a clean towel and put them back directly under their basking spot so they can warm back up.

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When I have new beardies, I change the water for each one so I don't spread any diseases. Tonight Thor got the first bath, then I washed out the sink and refilled it for Toothless. I also used separate towels for them. Because Lizzie, Max, and SweetPea have been with me and around each other for a long time, I let them share the same water.



SweetPea drinking. She's about to shed so her back is white

Max drinking. He weighed a lot more when I picked him up!

Toothless & her first bath with me

Lizzie drinking. He used to hate bath time, but now he enjoys it

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Toothless, rescue number 12

Toothless was given me today by the lady who adopted Spike. She is about a year old and has MBD already. Her lower jaw is starting to protrude and her spine is curving near her tail. She's young enough that I think a good diet, a lot of outside time, and some calcium injections/supplements will make a difference for her. 

See how tiny?


Trying to get her basking temp up but she kept sitting on the thermometer

Bath time- making sure she is hydrated