New leopard gecko pet

DMD123

Administrator
Staff member
Contributing Member Level III
I like it! Is that a map of 'middle earth' in the background?  :joker: 

I like to think outside the box and once used an Asian watercolor print from a calendar as a background. The map background is cool.  :spoton: 
 

hose91

Member
Actually, I think that's a map from Skyrim, or one of the Elder Scrolls games. Great concept though, and I'm with DMD that the map is cool. I love black backgrounds, and 3D rocky ones, but sometimes out of the box thinking is the way to go. Well done!
 

DMD123

Administrator
Staff member
Contributing Member Level III
hose91 said:
Actually, I think that's a map from Skyrim, or one of the Elder Scrolls games.
Yep its a Skyrim map, If it were 'Middle Earth' could have named the gecko 'Smaug'
 
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Anonymous

Guest
Very cool Missgrumpygills. From time to time I think about getting a reptile of somesort.
 

MorganEA

Member
We had bearded dragons for a long time but I had to give my baby away when I started having an allergic reaction to the insects he ate :(
 

Missgrumpygills

New Member
DMD123 said:
Yep its a Skyrim map, If it were 'Middle Earth' could have named the gecko 'Smaug'
I'm a LOTR fan as well :D that could work lol, depends if its a boy or girl. Thanks everyone! I was surprised how good the map looks :)
 

Missgrumpygills

New Member
fishNAbowl said:
Very cool Missgrumpygills.  From time to time I think about getting a reptile of somesort.
Thanks! :) Leopard geckos can live happy healthy lives on just meal-worms which I loveee, no crickets lol. They are docile and require much smaller tanks than most reptiles.
 
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Anonymous

Guest
Missgrumpygills said:
fishNAbowl said:
Very cool Missgrumpygills.  From time to time I think about getting a reptile of somesort.
Thanks! :) Leopard geckos can live happy healthy lives on just meal-worms which I loveee, no crickets lol. They are docile and require much smaller tanks than most reptiles.
Maybe I don't know what a meal-worm is but you eat them?
 

Missgrumpygills

New Member
fishNAbowl said:
Missgrumpygills said:
Thanks! :) Leopard geckos can live happy healthy lives on just meal-worms which I loveee, no crickets lol. They are docile and require much smaller tanks than most reptiles.
Maybe I don't know what a meal-worm is but you eat them?
Hahah no I don't eat them :laughhard: I meant that I love that they can eat meal-worms and nothing that can hop around like crickets. Meal-worms are a common feeder worm for reptiles.
 
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Anonymous

Guest
Invest in dubia roaches. Easy on exoskeleton and more nutrition for the scaley pets. They breed easy in plastic tubs, 0 escapes, can't climb most surfaces like pest roaches, need accessible h2o surface to thrive in any home, so infestation is 0. Once they breed. No longer need to buy live food ever. This could work for big fishes too. Just don't how the poop would be like for big wet pets.
 

Missgrumpygills

New Member
SiRWesDragon said:
Invest in dubia roaches. Easy on exoskeleton and more nutrition for the scaley pets. They breed easy in plastic tubs, 0 escapes, can't climb most surfaces like pest roaches, need accessible h2o surface to thrive in any home, so infestation is 0.
We had a colony but gave it up when the bearded dragons left :)
 

MorganEA

Member
SiRWesDragon said:
Invest in dubia roaches. Easy on exoskeleton and more nutrition for the scaley pets. They breed easy in plastic tubs, 0 escapes, can't climb most surfaces like pest roaches, need accessible h2o surface to thrive in any home, so infestation is 0. Once they breed. No longer need to buy live food ever. This could work for big fishes too. Just don't how the poop would be like for big wet pets.
Yea I was having an allergic reaction to their frass (poop)
 
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Anonymous

Guest
Super worms are also easy to breed and easy to keep out than mealworms where you must keep in refrigerator to keep longer. Where super worms just keep in plastic tub with oatmeal (food and substrate) and potatoes\carrots for h2o.
 
A

Anonymous

Guest
MorganEA said:
SiRWesDragon said:
Invest in dubia roaches. Easy on exoskeleton and more nutrition for the scaley pets. They breed easy in plastic tubs, 0 escapes, can't climb most surfaces like pest roaches, need accessible h2o surface to thrive in any home, so infestation is 0. Once they breed. No longer need to buy live food ever. This could work for big fishes too. Just don't how the poop would be like for big wet pets.
Yea I was having an allergic reaction to their frass (poop)
I was also allergic to them but wore mask and gloves to gather some to feed my scaley pets (4 adult bearded dragons). But sold them to get more tanks in my house. Just got bored when my original beardes died of age. Got new ones but wasn't the same. So wet pets I got instead.
 

Missgrumpygills

New Member
SiRWesDragon said:
Super worms are also easy to breed and easy to keep out than mealworms where you must keep in refrigerator to keep longer. Where super worms just keep in plastic tub with oatmeal (food and substrate) and potatoes\carrots for h2o.
Mine is so tiny, super worms would be too big. That's ok he/she loves meal worms and wax worms and I don't mind refrigerating them :)
 

JimA

New Member
We have had a leopard gecko for about 5+ years now, kids named him Spike. Last year my wife found another one from some guy on CL that just wanted it gone. She went and picked it up and named it Pumpkin cause he is a really cool orange color. Long story short spike is not a guy turns out he is a she, and she has started laying eggs. None have made it except for maybe this last batch. We ended up putting a plastic container in there with one end cut out. She went crazy pulled in a bunch of sand and coconut fiber and built a nest, there are 3 eggs in there now so will see how if they hatch. Should be fun if they do.. FWIW we feed them meal worms and crickets.
 

Missgrumpygills

New Member
JimA said:
We have had a leopard gecko for about 5+ years now, kids named him Spike.    Last year my wife found another one from some guy on CL that just wanted it gone.   She went and picked it up and named it Pumpkin cause he is a really cool orange color.    Long story short spike is not a guy turns out he is a she, and she has started laying eggs.   None have made it except for maybe this last batch.   We ended up putting a plastic container in there with one end cut out.  She went crazy pulled in a bunch of sand and coconut fiber and built a nest, there are 3 eggs in there now so will see how if they hatch.   Should be fun if they do..      FWIW we feed them meal worms and crickets.  
So, you keep the two in the same tank? :) I hear they are pretty easy to breed.
 

JimA

New Member
Missgrumpygills said:
JimA said:
We have had a leopard gecko for about 5+ years now, kids named him Spike.    Last year my wife found another one from some guy on CL that just wanted it gone.   She went and picked it up and named it Pumpkin cause he is a really cool orange color.    Long story short spike is not a guy turns out he is a she, and she has started laying eggs.   None have made it except for maybe this last batch.   We ended up putting a plastic container in there with one end cut out.  She went crazy pulled in a bunch of sand and coconut fiber and built a nest, there are 3 eggs in there now so will see how if they hatch.   Should be fun if they do..      FWIW we feed them meal worms and crickets.  
So, you keep the two in the same tank? :) I hear they are pretty easy to breed.
They are for now, we got a second tank to put him in to give her a break. We noticed she would eat like crazy lay the eggs then be really tired and not hungry for a bit then rinse repeat. So we thought it would be nice to separate them after she laid a couple. I haven't checked on the eggs, incubation seems to be 21 days or so. I will take a few pics and post them tomorrow..
 
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