Aye Aye, Grif! I feel like I should be putting on chain mail and war paint too.![]()
Aye Aye, Grif! I feel like I should be putting on chain mail and war paint too.![]()
Just got back from the vet. After a big scare (I pulled him out of his layers of tanks and he was belly-up) and an exam by a really awesome vet, he says he's hypo-calcemic, even with the calcium he's been getting. He told me to go get a Repti-Glo 5.0 UVB to help process the vitamins.
In addition, he gave Picard a one-time A and D vitamin boost in the office and sent me home with oral calcium to give him twice a day and a Protein-Enhanced Carnivore diet to syringe-feed him twice a week in the meantime.
Little guy has been moved to a 5 gallon tank with moist paper towels and a hidey-hole. He said that the guy may grow some or that he might be the product of inbreeding.
All in all a very productive visit and I'd like to thank everyone for all of your help. <3
Well honestly the UVB light isn't needed, but he will benefit from 4 to 6 hours of UVB exposure per day. Horn Frogs need insane amounts of calcium because they grow so fast. They can reach adult size is less than a 3 months with proper nutrition and supplemetation.
Keep us posted on his progress make sure he has shelter because those CFLs can be really bright.
So, it's been about 4 weeks, and although my little guy hasn't been eating crickets, I've been feeding him the rescue diet twice a week. Today I finally put him back in soil for the first time, came back 3 minutes later...and he had flipped himself over. Drama queen. I just put a bit of dirt on him and am walking away at the moment, hoping he just needs some adjusting time, because at the moment he looks like O___________________O
Any recommendations for moving a frog back to soil after it's been on paper towels for a month? Any way to wean them back into it?
I'm sorry to keep popping back in here. I have another update.
It's been over a month now since Picard went off his calcium regimen, and I was told to keep giving him the high protein carnivore diet twice a week until he starts eating on his own. He hasn't started. I put about 1/2 inch of soil into the bottom of the tank, but every few days he manages to flip himself onto his back a few times. I've watched him make his way across the tank before (it's only 5 gallons) and he tries to do it speedily, which I think may be contributing to him flipping over because he teeters back and forth (he has a bad front leg). I'm sure that force feeding him twice a week isn't helping.
So here are my questions.
--How long should I /not/ give him the liquid diet/try feeding him crickets before force-feeding him again? Maybe I'm not giving him enough of a chance to be hungry.
--Is it normal for them not to have solid waste while on a high protein diet? He hasn't had anything except for right when we started and he isn't impacted.
--I hate to say this, but if he's flipping himself over this much, I don't want to be cruel and put him through unnecessary stress. Is euthanasia considered a more humane option if the flipping continues? I just don't know if it's always stress or him trucking around the tank.
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