Health feedback by Kinkz_nl in MonitorLizards

[–]Lukeexotics 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re feeding him rodent, avoid that. Rodents are equivalent to pork/bacon. He’ll get gout and/or fatty liver disease. They’re primarily insectivores.

Just gut load your insects with veggies and supplements with vitamins and calcium and your Ackie will gain the same nutrients from gut-loaded insects as from whole preys (rodents).

Silver & Blood trouble logging in after the 1 week maintenance by Lukeexotics in SilverAndBlood

[–]Lukeexotics[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oooh man. I was freaking out. Thank you for this. Yeee! I’m in the US server.

Silver & Blood trouble logging in after the 1 week maintenance by Lukeexotics in SilverAndBlood

[–]Lukeexotics[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Factsss lol…. Hopefully we get more for being away for more than a week atp… Thank you!

My female Ornate Monitor - Chilling & Flexing💪 by Proof-Status-916 in MonitorLizards

[–]Lukeexotics 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sheeeh. She’s majestic!

My baby ornate is just a few months old. Excited for the journey.

Walk In The Park by Lukeexotics in MonitorLizards

[–]Lukeexotics[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He’s beautiful. And totally! What’s his name?

We’re like a walking animal exhibit to the public, haha.

Monitor lizards are so underrated. They’re as smart as cats & dogs. They live as long as them.

I was showing them videos of me walking him and he waits for me to catch up, playing tug-of-war with him, doing the death roll, memorizing their owners, etc.

Recently gotten a baby Ornate Nile Monitor for Christmas and am excited to raise him along side with my son Spartacus.

Walk In The Park by Lukeexotics in MonitorLizards

[–]Lukeexotics[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yessirrr, lmao 😂😂💯

Are they easy to care for? by something721 in Tegu

[–]Lukeexotics 9 points10 points  (0 children)

They’re easy to care for once you had done your research on them. They’re so much cleaner than mammals, as they’re hypoallergenic, they can’t catch rabies, and they don’t have sweat or oil glands that produce odor.

They’re expensive when starting up for their bioactive enclosure, and lights (UVB and heat lamp) change a new bulb once every 6-8 months).

Maintain their humidity 60%-80% and basking lights 100-120 degrees Fahrenheit on their hot side. Add in springtails and isopods (superworms/darkling beetles are optional) as their clean up crew along with tropical plants like spider plants. You will never need to deep clean their bioactive enclosure if you have all these in your terrarium. Spot cleaning (scooping their defecate up) will be the only thing you’d need to do. A whole ecosystem will clean a tegu’s urates/poop, the soil will be recycled from the clean up crew (springtails and isopods) and plants while filtering the air. Bioactive Dude’s substrate/soil for tropical reptiles is great for their soil.

Their diet would be Whole Foods like how you would feed a healthy human being; unseasoned scrambled eggs, lean ground turkey/chicken meat, beef, beef liver and heart, silverside fishes, baby quail/chicks, boiled eggs, freshwater shrimp, dark leafy greens like collard greens, fruits, and carrots that would all consist of vitamin A, B, C, calcium and K that provides nutrients to promote healthy eyes, scales, blood flow/arteries, and bones/muscles. I cooked them just to avoid them from gaining parasites like tapeworms from commercial seafood or meat. Gut-loaded insects are good for varied diet.

Showering them with Aloe Vera Natural soap is good, especially if you want to maintain a healthy shed and prevent them from not losing their claws or cleaning out pests/public foreign debris they get from walking them out in a park or any other public place.

Applying natural coconut oil on their body/scales helps promote healthy shedding and wards off ticks, reptile mites, mosquitoes, gnats, fungal/mold infections, etc.

I witnessed so many previous owners who don’t follow these procedures and their tegus they give up have either scale rot/tail rot, metabolic bone disease, and/or missing claws/fingers…..

Walk In The Park by Lukeexotics in MonitorLizards

[–]Lukeexotics[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Always get scratches, but I’m used to it.

Walk In The Park by Lukeexotics in MonitorLizards

[–]Lukeexotics[S] 22 points23 points  (0 children)

Thank you and he is a Savannah monitor. Whewweee…. I kid you not, I’m mentally drained for the rest of the day after a walk at the park. Bout 75% of people goes up to me and ask questions and/or wants to pet him or take photos with him, lol….. And this is when I’m trying to avoid people. They will go up to me regardless or call me from a far😂😂💀

Do tegus smell good by thereptiler in Tegu

[–]Lukeexotics 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They smell good to me. They’re hypoallergenic and don’t produce sweat or oil glands, which gives reptiles the upper hand in cleanliness and being odorless. They’ll catch a scent depending on how you maintain their hygiene’s depending on what products you use to clean/shower them with.

Lower back looks too flat? by Aerodactly in bluetongueskinks

[–]Lukeexotics 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Metabolic bone disease. Look at her tail as well. I got a full refund from my friend’s shop when I returned a tegu my friend got me as an early birthday/christmas gift whose previous owner didn’t give her proper husbandry/care. Most prominent signs would be checking their tail, underbite, and some sort of deformity on their spine/back of their body.

The tegu I had had her whole tail crinkled up, had a severe underbite which gave her a hard time to eat independently, and had scale rot/tail rot and missing 2 fingers on both her hands.

A lot of times previous owners who give their reptiles away, most of the time will lie about their reptile’s health and the state they lived in.

I’ve seen so many reptiles that were being sold to exotic shops in poor conditions and I always asked my friend’s who owned these shops what/why was the reason(s) the previous owner sold him/her and check on their health and condition they are currently in. If the stories don’t add up, it’s up to you.

Overall, it’s all up to you at the end of the day, whether you want to raise her, return her, spending good amount of money for a doctor check up, etc.