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lady_bug87
11-19-13, 10:53 AM
Hey I made an observation and I wanted to post it to see if anyone else has noticed anything similar.

I have a male hypo high orange who is around 4 and a half years old. I've had him since he was probably 4 months old. He's always been healthy always had a great appetite.

When he turned 4 I started to notice he was thinning out. (He's always been a lean dragon. Belly off the ground when he walks thick tail no triple chin) I noticed he still ate the same but was not maintaining his body weight as well after the age of 4.

So he gets extra fatty treats like butters once a week and still gets veg twice a week and crickets twice a week the general husbandry is fine I think he's just starting to get older.

Has anyone with older dragons noticed this?

pdomensis
11-19-13, 12:41 PM
I have a pogo about 4 years old and I'm not sure that I've seen what you're describing. I have noticed however that she will prefer a certain food for a while, like 6 months, and then abruptly decide she doesn't like that any more, so she thins out a bit until I find her new favorite.

red ink
11-19-13, 04:01 PM
I have a 10 year old lean dragon always loked lean....

This is him at 8 years old - still looks the same today.

http://i305.photobucket.com/albums/nn214/Red-Ink-Buldogs/7063266d.jpg (http://s305.photobucket.com/user/Red-Ink-Buldogs/media/7063266d.jpg.html)

http://i305.photobucket.com/albums/nn214/Red-Ink-Buldogs/71e6c103.jpg (http://s305.photobucket.com/user/Red-Ink-Buldogs/media/71e6c103.jpg.html)

lady_bug87
11-19-13, 04:39 PM
My dragon looks just like yours for the most part he's not emaciated I just noticed he wasn't holding on to fats as much

lisas
11-21-13, 04:44 PM
I have a 6 year old dragon that I've had for 4.5 years. She is much rounder now than she was even 6 months ago; it's the opposite of what is happening to yours. There is a reason for this though: I have learned a lot in the last 4 months by doing more research / joining forums and her diet has improved. I think that she was always meant to look the way that she does now. I guess they're just all different, some meant to be lean and some more filled out. She's an orange crush variety by the way.

Terranaut
11-21-13, 05:27 PM
Hmmmm. I used to feed my dragons (now gone) veggies every day. They got a bowl of squash with dandelion greens in the morning that I toseed before bed. They also got meal worm sprinkles every other day and the days I didn't do that they got 4-5 dubia. Mine were heavier than the one in the pic red ink posted but not overweight and were very active. I payed attention to how much veggies they ate and gave them roughly 20% of that in bugs. My male was 4 and my female was 11. Not sure if that helps but that was what I used to do. I did also give them treats of banana or shredded carrots on occasion , but not much.

lady_bug87
11-21-13, 05:38 PM
I'm starting to think I'm crazy

lisas
11-21-13, 06:41 PM
I'm the one with the rounded out 6 yr. old:
I feed mine veggies every morning and insects (waxworms or crickets, just a few) every other day. The veggies are mixed: dandelion greens, clover, mustard, raw squash slivers, green beans, celery, etc. and she eats a lot of them per sitting. I hand-feed her them (its "our time"). Actually, I just find she eats better with the hand-feeding. She gets at least 3 different veggies at a time, mostly dusted with calcium powder.

lady_bug87
11-21-13, 06:54 PM
When I used to offer veg every day he wouldn't touch it half the time so I stopped offering it every day

red ink
11-21-13, 07:01 PM
Two fuzzy mice

Bump the basking spot by 5C
Plenty of veg - cucumber or kiwi fruit for hydration as addition to regular salad due to the higher temps.

Do not feed any vertebrae prey until defecation and repeat twice in a month until desired weight is achieved - you can feed worms in betwwen but not crickets as the chitin would not be condusive while digesting the vertebrae prey.

This should bump up the fat and weight.

Mikoh4792
11-21-13, 07:03 PM
Do you guys find bearded dragon husbandry to be more advanced than normally purported when taken care of properly? Seems to be way more work than a snake.... or even a leopard gecko.

red ink
11-21-13, 07:30 PM
Do you guys find bearded dragon husbandry to be more advanced than normally purported when taken care of properly? Seems to be way more work than a snake.... or even a leopard gecko.

depends on how you want to to it... they are a very tolerant species.

Standard pet keeper care sheet

Newspaper/paper towel or tile substrate
Worms/crickets + Veg
Correct UV + basking temp

= easy

Naturalistic set up

Sand mixture substrate - hygiene factors involved
Higher basking temp
Higher hydration requirements
Occasional vertebrae prey
+
Basic caresheet

= requires a bit more attention.

Either or works well.

lisas
11-21-13, 09:23 PM
Way more advanced than the corn snake I have.

I'll speak to what I do:

high basking spot, night drop
bio-active substrate, multiple hides, climbing spots
40 gallon
large variety of plant foods
Different insects, worms
soak every night
calcium, repti-vitamins
once in awhile
handling time (my favorite)

When I didn't know what I was doing I had her on calcium sand in a 20 gallon with a 150 watt red left on all the time, no hide. She was eating superworms and greens, some fruit. Glad she's still with us.