sarahaney6
New Member
- Messages
- 14
- Location
- Waterville, Maine
I realize this might be in the wrong category but since its only happening with my hatchlings I figured I would post it here.
I hatched my very first two leos four days ago. They both shed yesterday and I figured it would be worth leaving food for them. I know most leos don't eat for the first week or so.
The issue I'm having is that when I removed the dish from the tub it was filled with completely liquefied super worms.
The hatchlings are in 6 qt tubs in a homemade rack. They are on paper towels for substrate with two hides. Towels are slightly moist but no condensation build up on the sides of the tubs. Hot spot is on point. They're hooked up to a VE-300 with heat mats until the tape arrives in the mail (they hatched a little sooner than I expected them to).
I am not having this problem with any of my other geckos. They are in 20 qt totes in the same rack system hooked up to the same thermostat.
If anyone can tell me what's going on I would really appreciate it!
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I hatched my very first two leos four days ago. They both shed yesterday and I figured it would be worth leaving food for them. I know most leos don't eat for the first week or so.
The issue I'm having is that when I removed the dish from the tub it was filled with completely liquefied super worms.
The hatchlings are in 6 qt tubs in a homemade rack. They are on paper towels for substrate with two hides. Towels are slightly moist but no condensation build up on the sides of the tubs. Hot spot is on point. They're hooked up to a VE-300 with heat mats until the tape arrives in the mail (they hatched a little sooner than I expected them to).
I am not having this problem with any of my other geckos. They are in 20 qt totes in the same rack system hooked up to the same thermostat.
If anyone can tell me what's going on I would really appreciate it!
Sent from my LG-H830 using Tapatalk