MyTown Monday: Our Chameleon Cage
For today's My Town Monday post, we're visiting my house. Our veiled chameleons' cage, to be exact.
Because before I went to Oklahoma, something uberly exciting happened here.
OUR FEMALE VEILED CHAMELEON LAID 42 EGGS!!
I know, it's craaazzzy. She laid 23 eggs at the end of May. There are only 5 healthy eggs left from this first batch. The 42 eggs from this second batch look plumper and healthier. She's laying eggs about every 3 months. Holy Color-Changing Reptile!
She was a little cranky with the male for a couple of days before THE EVENT. See the blue robin-eggish spots which indicate pregnancy.
Here is her very fat tummy. Not including her tail, she's about 5 inches long. We still can't believe she had 42 eggs tucked in there.
Child #2 and Child #4 fill a five-gallon flower pot with sand from our sandbox. They stir in water for a damp mixture.
She begins to dig. It takes her 7.5 hours to dig a tunnel, disappear into it, lay 42 eggs, climb back out of the tunnel and smooth it over. (It took her 9.5 hours to lay her first batch of 23 eggs. So, she's definitely speeding up now that she knows what she's about.)
After digging down about 8 inches, Child #2 finds the first layer of eggs. Here he is setting them carefully in vermiculite in a deli dish.
Our incubator is full! With FORTY-SEVEN eggs (5 from the first batch + 42 from this second batch). Child #2 has started planning how he'll spend his riches. Each baby fetches $25 from our local reptile pet store.
Here's the proud papa. Not really. He slept through her whole ordeal.
For links to the other MTM participants, please head over to our My Town Monday blog which was set up by Clair Dickson. Thank you Clair! I'll be back to a regular kind of post next Monday, but I couldn't resist sharing the good news.
This is wonderful. I loved the pictures. I can't wait until the eggs hatch and you post the pictures of all those babies. Will you keep any or sell them all?
ReplyDeleteOK - that is CRAZY!!!!
ReplyDeletewhen will we know if you are proud parents???
ReplyDeleteCongratulations! How very exciting. I had no idea that chameleons laid so many eggs in one year or went spotty. Looking forward to the hatching.
ReplyDeleteI was having a hard time understanding the excitement about having over 40 lizards in your house, but now that I know you're selling them, I feel a lot better.
ReplyDeleteWhat exciting news! I hope that soon we will see pictures of chameleon babies! And I hope your children do get rich with this! College is getting more and more expensive; this may be a way to stoke the fund :-)
ReplyDeleteThe eggs take 7-9 months to hatch. So, the first 5, assuming they make it, might hatch around Christmas. Which means if she lays again in another 3 months, we'll have to buy a 2nd incubator!
ReplyDeleteHow Cool! I want to see Holiday Chameleon Babies, too! What could be more festive?
ReplyDeleteThat is really cool! What a neat experience to watch the little things come to life.
ReplyDeletecongratulations again. How long will it be until you have small reptiles?
ReplyDeleteAh the joys of the reproductive cycle. Cool, though. I love the pics of the eggs.
ReplyDeleteChameleons are as cool as I always thought they'd be.
ReplyDeleteI'm exhausted just THINKING about that many eggs, let alone laying them!
ReplyDeleteCool!
ReplyDeleteI hope Child#2 actually gets to make some money. Those things are going to be tiny when they hatch.
How long do they have to incubate?
Wow! Congratulations. :) I'm just glad I'll never have to have that many at a time. :D
ReplyDeleteBarrie, I'm glad you posted an update. This is quite exciting! More eggs, and what do the hatched ones eat?
ReplyDeleteThis is very cool, Barrie. Can't wait for more updates.
ReplyDeleteI wish our gecko was that cool. The only party trick he knows is to hang in the closet and scare the snickers out of me.
ReplyDeleteI do hope none escape and find new living arangements elsewhere in your home.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a fun experience to have
Shauna, at this point the plan is to sell them all. BUT I might be able to talk child #2 into keeping a couple of babies....
ReplyDeleteKaye, Solvang Sherry, Vodka Mom ( in alpha order!) : the eggs incubate for 7-9 months. So, the earliest the remaining 5 eggs from the first batch will hatch is Christmas.
ReplyDeleteBarbara, the babies will eat pinhead crickets. Which is a bit of a pain in the neck because our local pet store doesn't carry such small crickets.
ReplyDeleteAngela, Ack!!! I hadn't thought of that!
ReplyDeleteTerryLynn: I snorted tea at your comment!
ReplyDeleteWow - great pics.. :) Can't wait to meet the babies.
ReplyDeleteThat is really cool! Can't wait to see pics of the babies!
ReplyDeleteWow so you are into breeding. My sister does that too, birds, snakes, reptiles, you name it, lol, a zoo house. Thanks for sharing your cool experience, never seen the process before. Hope all is well otherwise, Anna :)
ReplyDeleteThank God you posted this! I have been DYING to know about the eggs. So, are you saying none every hatched, or are the first batch still in incubation? I can't WAIT to see the babies!!
ReplyDeleteGood Luck!
Bina, the 5 remaining eggs from the first batch are still in the incubator. These guys are slow cookers! Believe me, I will put a photo of the first baby veiled that pops out. I can't wait!
ReplyDeleteStopped by to say I finished "I, so don't do spooky" today. It was so much fun, I really liked it. And I still love Barrie.
ReplyDeleteCongrats on another great book.
And I will be coming back to check out the baby chameleons.
I find your chameleon posts fascinating! :)
ReplyDelete