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What is a Bearded Dragon?
Bearded dragons
(or Beardies as they are also known ) are lizards that are
native to the very dry deserts areas and woodlands of central
Australia. There diet in the wild consists of a variety of
insects, small vertebrates, and various kinds of vegetation.
Beardies are survivors and will eat a wide variety of food
items which consists of anything that will fit into their mouth.
Beardies tend to be very placid and tolerate and even enjoy
being handled and held, which is rare among reptiles and
lizards.
Bearded Dragons make excellent pets because they are pretty
hearty and can survive many mistakes made by their human
friends. Another thing that makes Beardies a great pet is their
laid back personalities. Beardies get their name from their
"beard" that they display during breeding displays. Mature
males' "beards" become black during courtship and their breeding
displays. Adult bearded dragons typically have about a ten inch
body length and range in length from fifteen to twenty-four
inches in total length at maturity.
Male bearded dragons are longer and have larger heads than
females. Female bearded dragons tend to have a thicker, bulkier
body structure than males. We are proud of our bearded dragons
for sale. Please click on the link below to see our bearded
dragons for sale.
Twenty years ago
you could only get normal bearded dragons that were gray in
color and they were rare and expensive. Through selective
breeding highly colored specimens are now available. Dragons
can be found that are orange, yellow, white and even red or
variations or these colours.
Our goal here at “Kate’s
Bearded Dragons” is to consistently produce dragons with the
highest possible colour such as eye popping “Fletcher Reds”,
“Fletcher Oranges” and Fletcher Yellows”.
Kate’s Bearded Dragons are hand
picked to produce the best possible breeding stock. Our dragons
come from Top Canadian, U.S. and European bloodlines. Our goal
is to produce the most striking Bearded Dragon colorations
available on market today.
Bearded dragons are wonderful
pets. They make excellent class room projects for teachers and
students and can be a very personable and gentle pet. Dragons
also have interesting personalities and are very social with
each other. Provided it is an all female group. If you have a
male he needs to be in his own cage so he doesn’t attempt to
breed the female either when she is too young or that he doesn’t
over breed her and stress her.
Are Bearded Dragon
lizards the right pet for me?
If you are
considering to purchase a bearded dragon as a pet, ask yourself
the following questions:
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Will you enjoy the challenge of raising a tiny
hatchling up to a robust, healthy adult (average lifespan =
7-10 years)?
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Will you enjoy keeping live
crickets and worms in the house to feed the little dragon
everyday? [Crunch, Crunch!]
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As the dragon gets older, he/she will need more
vegetables; will you have the time and patience to buy fresh
veggies and chop them up for the dragon to eat?
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Are you prepared to clean up lizard poop?
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A full-grown bearded dragon needs at least a
30-gallon tank or 3-foot cage. Do you have room to keep a
sizable tank or cage?
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Will you enjoy caring for and watching your
lizard grow throughout the years?
If you
answered "yes" to the questions above, then the bearded dragon
lizard is a pet suited for you.
Dragon Care Info
Housing & Care
Before purchasing your bearded dragon
lizard, prepare for your pet's arrival by reading and
understanding how to care for them. Some items that you may
want to purchase at the pet store or online are:
-
cage
substrate (e.g. play sand)
-
heat bulb (incandescent ) and fixture
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UVA/UVB fluorescent bulb and fixture
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furniture (e.g. branch/bridge for bearded dragon
to perch on)
-
food (crickets, worms, veggies)
common
Mistakes to Avoid -
These are some common mistakes many people make with their new
dragons.
1. Not using a UVB light!
2. Not changing their UVB light every 6 months
3. Putting a baby dragon in a big cage
4. Keeping a larger dragon in a 10-20 gallon tank. NOT OK.
5. Feeding lettuce as a major part of their dragon's vegetable
diet.
6. Not feeding baby dragons enough crickets (2-3 times a day as
much as they can eat in 5 mins)
7. Forgetting to build up in their cages, Dragons love to climb
8. Not checking their temperature in the basking spot (many just
think they are hot enough)
9. Not bathing or making sure their dragon drinks enough.
10. Using a substrate made of small particles like bark or
walnut shells. Although its sand, I don't recommend Calcium sand
either.
11. Not gut loading crickets!
12. Not getting a fecal check done on their beardie once a year
13. Not taking their dragon to the vet when they suspect a
problem
14. Not getting their dragon within 12 inches or less of their
UVB light
15. Keeping Male and Female dragons together after they are
babies.
16. Putting dragons together of different sizes.
Make sure a shallow water dish
is available at all times.
Adult bearded dragons may be
fed once daily. Their diet should be varied and may consist of
vegetables, crickets, mealworms, Butter worms, Horn worms, Silk
worms, Rep Cal bearded dragon pellets and some fruit.
Vegetables need to be fed
daily. They include collard greens, dandelion, radicchio,
endive, shredded carrots, shredded sweet potatoes, and butternut
squash. Since may of these food are very hard raw you can
either use a shedder to mince the vegtables nice and fine or cut
the vetatables especially the squash into very long paper thin
slices no wider than the width between you dragons eyes. Squash
and other vegtables can be hand fed daily. Cantaloupe ( sliced
thin like the squash ), strawberries, blueberries and
raspberries can be fed once a week or so for a treat but only
just a few Do not use Boston, Iceberg or Romaine lettuce as
they contain very little nutrition. Apples should be used only
occasionally as they are a bowl irritant.
Scrambled or boiled eggs can be
added to any salad mixture for a nutritional protein source.
Bearded dragons love eggs and eggs are an excellent source of
protein and fat for babies and adults.
All food items should be dusted
with a high quality calcium powder with D3 such as Rep-Cal w/D3.
A vitamin supplement should be used once weekly such as Nekton
Rep or Herptivite.
Crickets in themselves are not
a nutritional source of food but are used in the reptile
industry because of their large abdomen and ability to be
gut-loaded. It is what the cricket has eaten that is in their
stomach that is nutritious for your dragon. Crickets should be
gut-loaded for twenty-four to forty-eight hours with a high
protein and multi grain mix prior to feeding them off to the
bearded dragon. Remember what the cricket eats is what the
bearded dragon is eating as well.

Don’t feed Crickets that are too big,
it can cause your dragon to become paralyzed in the back legs.
ONLY feed crickets or other food that is no bigger then the
width between your dragons eyes.
During the breeding season it
is very important that females be given a diet rich in calcium
and vitamins to maintain good health following egg laying.
Although bearded dragons will
breed at ten to twelve months of age they do not reach their
full growth potential for twenty-four months.
A basking light should be
provided at one end of the cage. The temperature at the basking
area should reach 90-100 deg f with the other end of the
enclosure being room temperature 74 deg f. Improper basking
temperatures will result in poor muddy coloration of the bearded
dragon and improper digestion of food and poor organ function.
It is imperative that the temperature be controlled and
monitored by a digital read thermometer.
Exposure to natural sunlight,
whenever possible is very important. Make sure the enclosure you
provide outside for your bearded dragon allows for good
ventilation so that the animal is not overheated while being
exposed to sunlight. A shaded area should also be provided
within the enclosure. Ideally exposure to the sun should take
place once weekly with a minimum of thirty minutes of exposure
through the warm weather months.
Indoor enclosures should have a
high quality full spectrum light with UVB producing capability.
Full spectrum lighting, however, does not take the place of
natural sunlight.
You can purchase UVB emitting
bulbs that will fit right into a basking lamp and avoid
purchasing the very long and expensive UVB bulbs for your
enclosure. The cost on the UVB bulb for a 5.0 is around $10.00.
UVB bulbs are not heat emitting
so you will still need to provide a basking light with a heat
emitting bulb for your basking area. A regular household bulb
will emit enough heat for a proper basking temperature of 90 deg
f. Failure to provide the correct basking temperature will
result in respiratory infections.
It is possible to sun a bearded
dragon through an open window if outside temperatures permit the
opening of the window. UVB rays will go through the window
screen but will not penetrate window glass. DO NOT use glass
tanks for sunning as they overheat to dangerous temperatures.
If you use the window method
for sunning your bearded dragon monitor your inside cage
temperatures so that the enclosure does not overheat. Maximum
temperature inside the enclosure should not exceed 90 deg f and
a shade area should be provided as well with a temperature of
approximately 80 deg f. Temperatures above 110 deg f may cause
heat stroke and death.
Substrate materials should be
free of sand as sand causes impaction in reptiles. Peat Moss and
store bought topsoil mixed in equal parts is an excellent
substrate for bearded dragon adults and babies. Peat moss and
top soil are organic and digestible and control odor naturally.
Minimum housing requirements
for an adult pair should be 32" x 32" x 32", which is similar to
the dimensions of a rabbit hutch. A fifty-gallon long aquarium
is also large enough to house an adult pair.
Babies should be housed in a
minimum of a twenty-gallon long aquarium tank with a screen lid
on top. A basking lamp can be placed on one end of the screen
top. Climbing branches should be placed on the basking side and
end approximately six to eight inches from the light. The
basking area on the closest branch to the light should be 85-90
def f. The opposite end of the tank should remain room
temperature. A simple sixty watt household bulb is sufficient to
achieve a 85-90 deg f basking area for a twenty gallon long
aquarium tank.
DO NOT use ten-gallon tanks to
house babies. Ten-gallon tanks do not have enough surface space
for heat from the basking lamp to dissipate. Using a ten-gallon
tank to house any reptile can have deadly results. A ten-gallon
tank with a basking lamp will act as an oven and dehydrate or
literally bake the animal to death.
To date all data suggests the
bearded dragon specie have genotypic or chromosomal sex
determination unlike other reptile species where sex
determination is determined by the temperature the egg is
incubated at.
Male bearded dragons have a
larger and wider head. The femoral pores are very pronounced in
male bearded dragons. Female bearded dragons have a narrower
head and are shorter and heavier than their male counter part.
The males also develop a bulge on each side of the tail just
under the cloacol opening. As in most reptile species the male
is much more brilliant in color than its female counterpart.
Youngsters can be sexed by the
cloacol opening to the trained eye by pulling back the cloacol
opening, just slightly. The cloacol opening on the males is
significantly wider than their female counterpart. Young female
bearded dragons cloacol opening is much narrower. This method of
sexing youngsters, however, is not 100%. Specimens profiled on
A-1 Reptiles available catalog page under the age of five months
are vent sexable only. Juveniles are site sexable at the age of
five months.
Bearded dragons will begin to
breed at anywhere from ten to fifteen months of age. The females
abdomen will expand quite considerably when carrying eggs.
Pregnant females should be
provided with an egg laying box that is at least eighteen inches
in depth and twenty-four inches long. The box may be filled with
peat moss and top soil. Failure to provide females with egg
laying boxes may cause egg-binding and will result in death for
females.
Female bearded dragons will lay
anywhere from fifteen to thirty-five soft shelled eggs at one
time. Females will lay each clutch of eggs in thirty day
intervals and may lay anywhere from three to six clutches in a
breeding season.
After the eggs have been laid
they can be removed for incubation. Hoovabators are commonly
used and may be purchased at any local livestock supply store.
Temperature inside the incubator should remain at 85 deg f
throughout incubation with a hatch time of about sixty days.
Vermiculite or Canadian
Sphagnum Peat Moss are excellent incubation mediums. I prefer to
use Vermiculite. The Vermiculite should be kept moist and not
wet. A slight indent should be made in the Vermiculite and the
eggs should be placed within the indent. The top half of the
bearded dragon eggs should remain exposed. The bearded dragon
eggs will hatch in approximately sixty days at an incubation
temperature of 85 deg f.
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up for your FIRST Bearded Dragon
Ok you have decided you are getting a bearded
dragon…so now what? There are SO many things in the
pet stores and online, how do you know what you REALLY
need and don’t need? Well in this section I will tell
you what you need to buy or find to get started on the
right track with your first bearded dragon.
If something is in
bold orange type it will be a link to a store when you
can buy it or see what it looks like.
Here is a list of supplies you will need, and then
below they will be explained with links to where you
can find them, and pictures of many of the products.
1. Cage
2. Heat light
3. UVB light
- changed EVERY 6 months!
4. Substrate for bottom of cage
5. Furniture for inside the cage
6. Vitamins – Multivitamin and Calcium
7. Food – Insects, Veggies, Pellets
8. Thermometer
9. Timer for lights
Cages -
The enclosure for your bearded dragon is usually the
biggest purchase you will need besides your dragon.
There are many types of cages out in the market and
they all have pros and cons.
Males and
females should be kept together ONLY as babies!
Once they reach Juvenile age they should be separated.
Males should live alone at this point, but females can
usually live together. But watch closely for any
dominance issues, or one of the dragons hiding too
much. If one is doing poorly, then separating them
will most likely help. We don't recommend keeping more
then 2 females together.
Glass Tanks:
These are probably the most popular type of enclosure
for a dragon. They are not that expensive and you can
usually find one used or free if you look around. They
also look nice on a wood aquarium stand. A glass tank
is a good tank to start a baby off in. We sell baby at
8 weeks or older. If you are buying a baby we
recommend a 20 gallon LONG reptile tank. A long tank
will be wider and shorter then a 20 gallon fish tank.
Reptile tanks usually cant hold water and they are
made of thinner glass then a fish tank since they
don’t need to withstand the pressure of the water.
A baby can’t
live in a 20 gallon tank for long.
They will outgrow it quickly, however its not a good
idea to put a small baby in a large tank to start, as
it will be very hard for the dragon to catch crickets.
You could start in a big tank if you block half off
with a board to make a smaller living area until your
dragon grows. After your dragon gets too big for a 20
gallon (12 inches or so), they can be moved to a
either a 40
gallon reptile tank or larger. We
think that the smallest tank a normal size adult
dragon can live in is 50 gallons. Some dragons don’t
grow as large and may be happy in a 40 gallon, but the
more space you can give your dragon the happier it
will be. A 50-75 gallon is good for one male, a 75
could house 2 females. Males should live alone after
about 6-8 months so know that if you buy a male and
female baby they will need to be separated to prevent
dominance and early breeding.

The negatives of glass tanks are they are heavy and
hard to move, they can crack or break, and glass does
not hold heat in very well. We find that although
dragons can live in a glass tank just fine, there
color is not the best in one.
Background:
If you are going to use a glass tank, please get a
tank background to put on the back AND SIDES to help
your dragon feel more secure like in the tank above!
Melamine:
Melamine cages can be bought online or you can build
one yourself. They are made out of the melamine board
your can buy at Home Depot or Lowe’s. It’s the
material that a lot of shelving is made out of. You
can buy it in sheets and get it cut to build your own
cage. You can also order one from our supplier Sam
Craver, on his website INSERT LINK if you live
locally. Melamine cages are more expensive then glass
ones and VERY heavy, however they offer many benefits.
The dragons look awesome in them since the white
melamine reflects the light making a very bright
living area. The brighter the cage the happier the
dragon. Also the heat light and UVB lighting can be
mounted and wired inside the cage so you don’t have to
see any heat domes and making it much safer for pets
and children.
We like a cage that is 3-4 ft long, 18-24 inches deep
and 18-24 inches tall. You can always have a baby in
one of these and just block off half of the cage with
a board until your dragon grows.
With a melamine cage you want to get it with a fixture
for a heat light installed on one side of it and the
longest florescent fixture you can fit in it for your
UVB light. A double fixture is even better. You also
want to make sure there are plenty of venting for heat
to escape.
PVC:
These cages are the newer version to the Melamine
cage. Same concept, and a very similar look. The PVC
cages are VERY light and weigh almost nothing. They
can easily be moved if needed. They also can come in a
variety of shapes and colors. They are nicer looking
then the melamine cages because the PVC is very thin
and streamlined. They are more expensive then the
melamine however. With a PVC cage you want to get it
with a fixture for a heat light installed on one side
of it and the longest florescent fixture you can fit
in it for your UVB light. A double fixture is even
better.

Here at SunshineDragons we like to use
CageCrafters.
They make top quality
PVC or Melamine
cages. The PVC can be shipped, however
the melamine are pick-up only. If you dont live near
NJ, a quick search online should bring up someone near
you that makes cages.
Other Options:
There are many other types of cages on the market that
you can research, the above are the ones we have used
and like. There are also
Vision Cages,
Acrylic Reptile Cages from BigAppleHerp,
and
Reptariums
which some people have used with success, but that I
can’t recommend as I have not tried them.
Heating
-
Now that you have your cage you need to figure out how
you will heat it. The cage you chose will determine
what kind of heating you use.
Glass Tank:
Usually a
dome fixture
with a
basking light
or a normal spot light laying on top of the screen lid
will work find. You will need to measure with a
thermometer and adjust the wattage of your bulb until
the basking site is about 100-105 degrees in the
basking spot.
If you have a tall tank 20-24 inches, you could also
use a
Mercury Vapor bulb.
These bulbs are expensive but provide UVB and heat to
your dragons. They need to hang straight down and you
may want to get a lamp stand like the
Repti-Lamp Stand.
That way you don’t have to pick it up to get in your
tank all the time and risk breaking and expensive
bulb.
Melamine and PVC cages:
You will have to measure your temps as there are so
many variables with these cages. Use can try a regular
lightbulb if you cage is low in light, however
sometimes it will heat the whole cage and not direct
enough heat down. Basking lights and normal household
spot lights are normally better. Just make sure your
light isn’t getting your basking area REALLY hot. If
your cages are 24 inches tall you could use a Mercury
Vapor light in them, but any shorter then that, you
should use a regular UVB light.
Dimmer
Switch: You could add a
inline dimmer switch
to your heat light plug so you can adjust your temps
without changing bulbs all the time. As the seasons
change, so do the temps in your house and in your
cages and usually your wattage will need to be
changed. With the help of a dimmer switch you can just
lower or raise the intensity. You should be able to
pick one up at your local hardware store for under
$20.
Lighting -
The brighter a cage, the happier the dragon.
A dark cage will make for a very unactive dragon. UVB
lighting is very important for your dragon. These
bulbs simulate the sun allowing the dragons to produce
Vitamin D3 which helps them metabolize the calcium
they need to maintain health. Without UVB many reptile
get Metabolic Bone Disease. Also the UVB light will
stimulate their appetite and your dragon will eat
better. These lights
NEED to be changed
every six months even if they are
still working as the UVB runs out. Buying them online
will save you A LOT of money, as pet stores charge
high prices. Buying more then one at a time will save
you in shipping costs.
You can use a UVB light that is a long florescent tube
light. These lights do NOT produce much heat and a
heat light will need to be used also. You can buy shop
light or Florescent light fixtures at Home Depot or
Lowe’s for them. In a glass tank you can lay the light
right on top the of the screen lid. In a melamine or
PVC cage you should have a fixture installed inside
the cage when you buy it.
The UVB
lights we use are the
Reptisun 5.0 or
Reptisun 10.0.
We get them at BigAppleHerp.com for much cheaper then
in a petstore.
MegaRays and other Mercury Vapor – You can also use
these lights that make UVB and heat, as described
above. We do not use them at SunshineDragons because
our cages are too low, however we know of many people
that use them with great results. The lights we
recommend are
Mega-Ray
bulbs (EB Series or SB Series) or
Power-Sun’s.
Timers -
Your lights should be on a cycle of about 10-14 hours
on in the summer and 8-10 hours on in the winter. We
prefer to keep them as close to what is happening
outside. Buy a timer for both your lights. It will
make your life easier, and if you are not home, your
dragon will still stay on its schedule.
Substrate
- There are many options on what to use on the bottom
of your cage. All baby dragons should be house on
paper towels, shelf liner, or cage carpet until at
least 12 inches. Many types of sand, bark, and ground
walnut shells, sold at petstores. We do not recommend
using any of these as most of them could cause
impaction if swallowed. The calcium sands tend to
clump inside the animal causing problems. A bark chip
or other type of substrate could also get stuck inside
them. We recommend the following substrates:
Reptile Carpet:
Sold in pet stores and online, it looks like a green
carpet for the bottom of your tank. Looks really nice
if maintained. Make sure you buy enough to have one
extra. Then when you change the cage you can put the
new one in and take your time washing and drying the
one that was just taken out of the cage. Here is an
example of a reptile carpet. This one comes with 2!
Perfect!
Reptile Carpet
You can also buy something that looks similar to
reptile carpet, at the home improvement stores. It is
an indoor/outdoor carpeting that you buy by the foot.
Its very thin and comes in a variety of colors. It is
not the plastic indoor/outdoor carpeting.
Washed
Screened Play Sand: If you want a sand
product we recommend washed screened play sand. You
can buy this at a home improvement store for a couple
of dollars for a 50 pound bag. You can make the sand
as deep as you want in the cage. Use a cup or a Sand
sifter to get the poop out of the cage. How often you
change the sand depends on the size of the cage and
how many dragons are in it. Some people report
impaction with play sand also, although we have never
had that problem. Don’t put any dragons under 12
inches on sand, and if you notice your dragon is
eating a lot of sand when catching his crickets, feed
him on a plate or in a separate Rubbermaid tub or
tank.
Shelf Liner:
You can also use a
non-slip non-adhesive shelf liner
like Duck's Smooth Top Easy Liner in your cage. This
is a kind of liner that you can use to line your
drawers. It is not the kind that sticks down. Its easy
to wipe poo off of it and to clean it. Once it gets
dirty you can switch it with a new piece and then
clean the old piece in a sink.
Paper Towel / Paper:
You can also use paper towels or newspaper or what we
use indented kraft paper that comes on rolls. We buy
it at
uline.com.
One roll will last a long time. These are not the
prettiest substrates but are on of the best to prevent
diseases. Its easy to change it often, and the cleaner
a cage is, the healthier your dragon will be.
Cage Furniture -
Be creative with decorating your cage, that’s the fun
part! If you have a tall cage make sure you use the
space high up with shelves or branches or hammocks.
Dragons LOVE TO CLIMB UP! So don’t waste all that
space up in the air.
Backgrounds:
A background on a glass tank is always a good idea. It
creates a more closed environment and causes less
stress on the dragon. Covering the back and sides is
best.
Hammocks:
If you have a glass tank a
repti-hammock
is an awesome thing! My lizards love them! Although
there is plenty of room, all of mine like to sleep in
the hammock together. If you ever decide to use a
Melamine cage instead you can screw some eye hooks in
to a corner, take off the suctions cups, and hang the
hammock there. Also these
Reptile Rock Ledges
offer a similar idea.
Branches:
A nice branch is always good to have.
Try to get one without a lot of little holes (like
Choya wood) for the crickets to hide in. A branch that
goes up high is always good to get your dragon close
to the UVB light. He has to have somewhere to hang out
which is within 12 inches or less of it. The UVB is
strongest there.
Hides:
its good to give your dragon some place to hind from
you, the light, dogs, anything that is bothering him.
It will also help when your dragon wants to brumate (a
form of hibernation). Half logs, caves, or even some
bricks with a board laid across can make good hides.
We like these
Basking Platforms
as hides alot! Also these
Hiding Huts
are great because they make them now with resin
instead of wood and they are much easier to clean and
to keep parasite free! Get the biggest size you can as
your dragon will outgrow a small one FAST! There are
many different types of hides to chose from!
Rocks - not
hot rocks: Rocks from outside or
paving blocks from your home improvement store can be
great to use under a basking light, or to build with.
Just make sure if you use sand, that you sink the
rocks all the way to the bottom and not just sitting
on top of the sand. If your dragon digs under the
rock, it could get crushed under it.
Dishes:
A nice low dish for veggies is nice to have. There are
also special dishes for worms to go in. Paper plates
could be used if you want to. Whatever works for you.
Vitamins -
Vitamins are VERY important for your dragon. They need
a lot of calcium because they grow SO FAST when they
are young. We shake up the crickets or other insects
in a container with the vitamins.
Calcium:
We use
Rep-Cal Calcium
powder with almost every feeding. Its cheaper to buy
the vitamins online.
Multivitamin: We use a multivitamin
called
Herptivite
a couple of times a week dusted on the live food.
Probiotic:
We use a probiotic called
AcidophiLiz+
after we give any medicine or for any dragon that
isn’t growing well. Probiotics have live active
cultures like yogurt does and creates good gut
bacteria in your dragon that medicines may kill off.
Food -
Please read our
general caresheet
to find out more on feeding your dragons, but here are
the types of things you need.
Rep-Cal:
We feed our dragons pellet food a couple of times a
week. These are hard dry foods and they
must be soaked in
water until soft or the dragon will
not eat it. You my wish to feed it separately or with
the greens. We use
Rep-Cal Bearded Dragon Pellets.
Veggies:
There is a list of veggies on the caresheet and they
can be purchased at your local supermarket.
Crickets,
superworms, and silkworms: When you
have a baby dragon you will go through A LOT of
crickets. Its best to order them online from a dealer
such as
Premium Crickets.
When they are older you may want to get some at a pet
store, but when young, they eat way too many. You can
also order superworms and silkworms online which they
love. |
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