I am so happy that you’re back making videos and I hope you can please still keep making more videos about teaching and caring about reptiles thank you so much brother and big big shout out from gratitude reptiles
This video is a comprehensive care/breeding advice that help me out to breed my wild caught spear point leaftails successfully. I strongly recommend watching this video and generally all video released by Frank. Thank you so much Frank.
Awesome as always! Loved learning about this species! If you're looking for video ideas, it would be GREAT to do one of you setting up an enclosure from scratch! 👍 Keep setting that bar high for the community! 🏆
Hi Frank. Thank you for sharing this high quality and and helpful vid. I’m your truly follower. You inspired me to start project breeding Electric blue day gecko. Now I’m ready to start a new one breeding this fantastic animal. I have a question for you and appreciate if you can help me on that. I just have fruit fly and bean beetles as feeder, are they enough for feeding leaftail gecks or I must consider crickets as well?
Happy to hear my info has been helpful! Yes bean beetles and fruit flies are too small for ebenaui once they become juveniles and adults. Good for babies.
@@LivingArtbyFrankPayne Thanks Frank. While feeding crickets are you using feeding tongs or just putting crickets inside of terrarium so they can hunt? Thank you in advance.
@@LivingArtbyFrankPayne Thank you Frank. Finally I got 2pairs but not captive bred. Do you believe any problem breeding them. Is that still easy to breed?
@@moe5520 Wild caught will always be more difficult than captive bred of any species. I recommend acclimating them for several months before keeping them together and attempting to breed.
Very cool! When you say they are hardier than their satanic leaf tail geckos do you mean that they are also more handleable? Can they be handled as much as a crested gecko, for instance, or is it best to not handle them? Thanks for the video!
Hi I have a question I got a carpet chameleon the other day on his back left leg joint seems to be swollen because the rest don’t look like that I was wondering if you can help me figure out what it is
For medical stuff you would have to check with a vet. I assume it’s wild caught? Unfortunately they often come with a variety of health issues and don’t last long. If you aren’t familiar with acclimating wild chameleons then a vet visit would be about all you could do beyond good care.