Well, Angel layed an egg Thursday in the floor of her viv and I had to wait till today to make a lay box. I put it in her viv and put her in it and, BINGO she took to it like a duck to water. She dug and dug till she found the bottom then got still, so I went over to check her progress (trying to give a lady her privacy). Much to my surprise she was setting in the hole she made eating the playsand/topsoil mix. Is this normal? I don't want her to get impacted or egg bound what do I do?
The mixture is damp right? like the same consistency You would make sand castles with? I usually put it all to one side when it's The right consistency and compact it kind of into a slopped mountain.. and then I sometimes will put them in the box and start digging for them so they can see me do it to kind of get the idea. when they're going hard- they definitely get sand all over their face and in their eyes and mouth because they're face deep digging away. Maybe she just had some on her face she was trying to get off? If she's actually eating it, then take her out and try feeding her first? The least substrate she ingest, the better.
She had eaten a huge salad and 15 giant mealworms an hour before.
I didn't add water to the mixture for fear of making mud out of it.
I watched her taking bites of it which concerned me.
Silly dragons sometimes do taste a bit of it, just watch that she doesn't continue to eat in excess. It's good that she dug in it a lot, you can put a lid on it or take it out for part of the day and after a few days she should be ready and realize that this is where her eggs need to go.
Silly dragons sometimes do taste a bit of it, just watch that she doesn't continue to eat in excess. It's good that she dug in it a lot, you can put a lid on it or take it out for part of the day and after a few days she should be ready and realize that this is where her eggs need to go.
I doubt it but if you keep it out for the majority of the time and just put it in once a day she may get right down to business soon when she actually does need to lay. If you're really worried you can replace the dirt with lots of shredded newspaper but make sure the box is covered mostly so she feels the same security + privacy that she would have in a cave dug in the dirt. Oh, and don't feel stupid, your question is a legitimate concern.
I doubt it but if you keep it out for the majority of the time and just put it in once a day she may get right down to business soon when she actually does need to lay. If you're really worried you can replace the dirt with lots of shredded newspaper but make sure the box is covered mostly so she feels the same security + privacy that she would have in a cave dug in the dirt. Oh, and don't feel stupid, your question is a legitimate concern.
I doubt it but if you keep it out for the majority of the time and just put it in once a day she may get right down to business soon when she actually does need to lay. If you're really worried you can replace the dirt with lots of shredded newspaper but make sure the box is covered mostly so she feels the same security + privacy that she would have in a cave dug in the dirt. Oh, and don't feel stupid, your question is a legitimate concern.
Well, I couldn't do the newspaper thing so I went with a 50/50 mix of ecoearth and peatmoss moistened to a tacky consistency. To. Say she did her thing would be an understatement.
This morning I put her lay box lay box in her viv and she went to town. When I got home from work she was just finishing up. Counting the 2 she dropped before the box was put in (I was worried sick) put out a total of 40 eggs. Needless to say I was astonished . Boy am I !!!!! Now it's bath time for her her