Vote for BP.Net for the 2013 Forum of the Year! Click here for more info.

» Site Navigation

» Home
 > FAQ

» Online Users: 1,416

0 members and 1,416 guests
No Members online
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.

» Today's Birthdays

None

» Stats

Members: 75,917
Threads: 249,118
Posts: 2,572,202
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, Necbov
Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 26
  1. #1
    Registered User Ezekiel285's Avatar
    Join Date
    08-07-2011
    Location
    Georgia
    Posts
    564
    Thanks
    323
    Thanked 166 Times in 148 Posts
    Images: 5

    Smile Couldn't help myself

    So i finally gave in and picked up a crested gecko today from our petco (had mixed feelings about getting one there but he seems to be in good health). However they gave me the usual "they eat baby food" crap, and "heat pads don't need dimmers because they stay at the temperature they are supposed to be". So I don't exactly trust their judgement on substrate, they pointed me to cypress mulch, is this ok for a baby crestie? (he will be on paper towels for now) Also i definitely need a dimmer for my UTH correct?

    Here are some quick cell phone pics, if anybody could tell me if its a morph or a "normal" or whatever that would be great too.





    Thanks for looking!
    Zeke - Facebook

    2.2 Ball Pythons
    0.0.2 Crested Geckos

  2. #2
    BPnet Veteran Kinra's Avatar
    Join Date
    03-05-2011
    Location
    Madison, WI
    Posts
    3,706
    Thanks
    1,170
    Thanked 1,288 Times in 1,090 Posts
    Images: 6
    I keep my cresties at room temp and on paper towels. Cresties don't like it when it gets above 80-85 degrees, so if you do use some type of heating it needs to be monitored.
    Rebecca
    facebook ~ google+
    www.rawreptiles.com ~ RAW Reptiles on Facebook
    Snakes
    Ball Pythons ~ Hypo Jungle Boas ~ Bredlis ~ Carpet Pythons
    Lizards
    Crested Geckos ~ Chahouas ~ Bearded Dragon
    Furry Friends
    1.0 Black Lab (Orion)



  3. The Following User Says Thank You to Kinra For This Useful Post:

    Ezekiel285 (11-25-2011)

  4. #3
    Registered User Ezekiel285's Avatar
    Join Date
    08-07-2011
    Location
    Georgia
    Posts
    564
    Thanks
    323
    Thanked 166 Times in 148 Posts
    Images: 5

    Re: Couldn't help myself

    Quote Originally Posted by Kinra View Post
    I keep my cresties at room temp and on paper towels. Cresties don't like it when it gets above 80-85 degrees, so if you do use some type of heating it needs to be monitored.
    makes perfect sense. I'm at home now and i'm not even using the UTH anyway because the temps are good but when i go back to school the dorms stay a lot colder so i wanted to have the UTH just in case, can't you get cheap dimmers from lowes or am I making that up?
    Zeke - Facebook

    2.2 Ball Pythons
    0.0.2 Crested Geckos

  5. #4
    BPnet Veteran Nick_bp's Avatar
    Join Date
    08-06-2010
    Location
    Tucson, AZ
    Posts
    236
    Thanks
    8
    Thanked 35 Times in 30 Posts
    Images: 4

    Re: Couldn't help myself

    You can make one and theyare pretty easy and really cheap. I made one a while back when I didnt have enough money for a t-stat for about 10 bucks.
    http://ball-pythons.net/forums/showt...r-temp-control

    0.1 Spider
    0.1 Cinnamon
    1.0 Mojave
    1.0 Butter Pastel het OG
    1.0 Staffordshire Bull Terrier x Rhodesian Ridgeback

  6. The Following User Says Thank You to Nick_bp For This Useful Post:

    Ezekiel285 (11-25-2011)

  7. #5
    BPnet Veteran EverEvolvingExotics's Avatar
    Join Date
    06-23-2010
    Location
    AZ
    Posts
    2,351
    Thanks
    1,052
    Thanked 729 Times in 646 Posts
    Images: 2
    First off congrats on your new addition. I know you have been considering one for a very long time. Welcome to the club!

    I have never used a heater for any of my crested geckos. Unless your temps are getting below 65-60 at night I wouldn't use any type of heat. Also those meal worms have a hard to digest exoskeleton, some people are very against these types of feeders. I occasionally feed them to my adult bearded dragon but for a small crestie I wouldn't recommend it on a regular basis, it could lead to impaction. It's best to stick to crickets or roaches of appropriate size. Paper towels work great but most substrates are suitable for crested geckos. Honestly, cresties are one of the hardiest pets around, you really have to try to kill them, or have bad luck. Either way enjoy your new guy, they are very enjoyable!
    Specializing in Ball Pythons, New Caledonian Geckos, and African Fat Tails


  8. The Following User Says Thank You to EverEvolvingExotics For This Useful Post:

    Ezekiel285 (11-26-2011)

  9. #6
    BPnet Veteran Jonas@Balls2TheWall's Avatar
    Join Date
    10-12-2010
    Posts
    1,659
    Thanks
    232
    Thanked 608 Times in 546 Posts
    Thats a great looking crestie! Congrats!

  10. The Following User Says Thank You to Jonas@Balls2TheWall For This Useful Post:

    Ezekiel285 (11-26-2011)

  11. #7
    BPnet Lifer mainbutter's Avatar
    Join Date
    09-30-2008
    Location
    Washington, DC
    Posts
    5,690
    Thanks
    269
    Thanked 1,374 Times in 1,053 Posts
    Images: 7
    A few crested gecko thoughts:

    - I've never used heat sources for my geckos. I prefer to keep them at room temperature, and as low as 60 in winter. Some people keep them as low as 55 in winter. I keep my geckos in the basement because indoor summer temps can break 80 degrees.. not good for cresties.

    - I exclusively feed Repashy Crested Gecko Diet ("CGD"). It's a powder you mix with water to the consistency of a thick milkshake, resembles rotting fruit. I buy mine in large bags from Pangeareptile.com

    - I keep my crested geckos in planted vivariums using "ABG mix" for substrate, available online from Josh's Frogs or you can look up how to make it yourself, typically on various dart frog and vivarium forums.

    - I see mealworms in a picture there. While supplementing a crested gecko's diet with insects can be a wonderful idea, I prefer to stick to crickets or dubia roach nymphs. On the occasion I do offer insects, I gutload overnight with CGD and then dust lightly with calicum WITHOUT vit. D3 prior to feeding. Personally, I stay away from mealworms for cresties, and I would definitely not stick to an all-insect diet.

    - For a long time before CGD was developed, crested geckos were kept in captivity with success on various baby foods. It's an old way of keeping them, but it has worked in the past. We have better options now, but I wouldn't scoff at it. The big issue is that the majority of baby foods are not suitable for cresties, it takes a bit of research and looking around to find the stuff that works with crestie biology.

  12. The Following User Says Thank You to mainbutter For This Useful Post:

    Ezekiel285 (11-26-2011)

  13. #8
    Registered User Ezekiel285's Avatar
    Join Date
    08-07-2011
    Location
    Georgia
    Posts
    564
    Thanks
    323
    Thanked 166 Times in 148 Posts
    Images: 5

    Re: Couldn't help myself

    Quote Originally Posted by eel588 View Post
    First off congrats on your new addition. I know you have been considering one for a very long time. Welcome to the club!

    I have never used a heater for any of my crested geckos. Unless your temps are getting below 65-60 at night I wouldn't use any type of heat. Also those meal worms have a hard to digest exoskeleton, some people are very against these types of feeders. I occasionally feed them to my adult bearded dragon but for a small crestie I wouldn't recommend it on a regular basis, it could lead to impaction. It's best to stick to crickets or roaches of appropriate size. Paper towels work great but most substrates are suitable for crested geckos. Honestly, cresties are one of the hardiest pets around, you really have to try to kill them, or have bad luck. Either way enjoy your new guy, they are very enjoyable!
    Thanks! I'm very excited about him/her

    The only reason im using a UTH is because im going to have my crestie in the dorms and we keep our room pretty cold, i really doubt it gets below 65 but i'd rather just have the peace of mind knowing there is heat if he needs it.
    Thanks for informing me about the mealworms. petco gives such great advice...
    And i just figured i would put him on paper towels so i could monitor his health better before i switched him over. I also wanted to make sure cypress mulch was ok (petco said it was good so that threw up red flags, lol). After a week or two i will probably switch him over to the good stuff. I'm super excited to watch him grow and see his personality, i can already tell these little guys have a lo of it.

    They aren't too needy about how their cage is set up are they? Food, water, plenty of leaves to hide in/climb on (security), right temps. That's all right? Change the water and food every other day? this seems too easy
    Zeke - Facebook

    2.2 Ball Pythons
    0.0.2 Crested Geckos

  14. #9
    Registered User Ezekiel285's Avatar
    Join Date
    08-07-2011
    Location
    Georgia
    Posts
    564
    Thanks
    323
    Thanked 166 Times in 148 Posts
    Images: 5

    Re: Couldn't help myself

    Quote Originally Posted by mainbutter View Post
    A few crested gecko thoughts:

    - I've never used heat sources for my geckos. I prefer to keep them at room temperature, and as low as 60 in winter. Some people keep them as low as 55 in winter. I keep my geckos in the basement because indoor summer temps can break 80 degrees.. not good for cresties.

    - I exclusively feed Repashy Crested Gecko Diet ("CGD"). It's a powder you mix with water to the consistency of a thick milkshake, resembles rotting fruit. I buy mine in large bags from Pangeareptile.com

    - I keep my crested geckos in planted vivariums using "ABG mix" for substrate, available online from Josh's Frogs or you can look up how to make it yourself, typically on various dart frog and vivarium forums.

    - I see mealworms in a picture there. While supplementing a crested gecko's diet with insects can be a wonderful idea, I prefer to stick to crickets or dubia roach nymphs. On the occasion I do offer insects, I gutload overnight with CGD and then dust lightly with calicum WITHOUT vit. D3 prior to feeding. Personally, I stay away from mealworms for cresties, and I would definitely not stick to an all-insect diet.

    - For a long time before CGD was developed, crested geckos were kept in captivity with success on various baby foods. It's an old way of keeping them, but it has worked in the past. We have better options now, but I wouldn't scoff at it. The big issue is that the majority of baby foods are not suitable for cresties, it takes a bit of research and looking around to find the stuff that works with crestie biology.
    Good to know about the temps, I may ditch the UTH after all. There are also crickets and CGD in the cage with him. I feel like petco severely misinformed me. As for the baby food i researched it one time and most things i read just said it was too sugary for them, but again it has worked in the past. I'll have to look into that substrate, and also the bigger bags of CGD. Thanks
    Zeke - Facebook

    2.2 Ball Pythons
    0.0.2 Crested Geckos

  15. #10
    BPnet Veteran Kinra's Avatar
    Join Date
    03-05-2011
    Location
    Madison, WI
    Posts
    3,706
    Thanks
    1,170
    Thanked 1,288 Times in 1,090 Posts
    Images: 6

    Re: Couldn't help myself

    Quote Originally Posted by Ezekiel285 View Post
    They aren't too needy about how their cage is set up are they? Food, water, plenty of leaves to hide in/climb on (security), right temps. That's all right? Change the water and food every other day? this seems too easy
    They are super easy to care for.

    The downside is they will drop their tails sometimes and they don't grow back. They also like to lick water off of the leaves and cage walls so I mist mine nightly. I don't think they will always drink out of a water bowl.
    Rebecca
    facebook ~ google+
    www.rawreptiles.com ~ RAW Reptiles on Facebook
    Snakes
    Ball Pythons ~ Hypo Jungle Boas ~ Bredlis ~ Carpet Pythons
    Lizards
    Crested Geckos ~ Chahouas ~ Bearded Dragon
    Furry Friends
    1.0 Black Lab (Orion)



  16. The Following User Says Thank You to Kinra For This Useful Post:

    Ezekiel285 (11-26-2011)

Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v4.2.1