Dear Julie,
Thanks for your post and help. I've kept klemeri now for three years and this is my
second clutch.
The first turned out to be both females and I wanted to know the temperature range in
order to get
some males.
If I can't get an incubator, what ideas do you have that can help me. Right now, I
have the eggs in
a small deli cup inside of a larger one. The eggs are sitting on some tissue and the
outer cup has
a film of water to maintain humidity. The cup has a lid but with holes on the sides
to provide
ventilation. I have the cup sitting atop the klemeri cage near they basking light and
I have a
thermometer there to monitor the temperature. At night though, I do turn off the
light for the
geckos, should I keep it on? If I do, will this effect the klemeri? If I do need to
get an
incubator, what would you recommend and does anyone have a used one that they would be
willing to
sell?
Also, what recipes do you use in feeding your klemeri. Aside from crickets and fruit
flies, what
nectar products do you use and what ingredients to you put in them.
Finally, I've order the McKeown's book on Day Geckos and I've been told that you have
some magazines
for sale that have articles that McKeown wrote that would be very useful. Can you
please send me
information on that too.
Thanks again to the list and to you Julie for your reply.
Sincerely,
David Macias
------------------------------------------
"You were born an original, don't die a copy."
--John Mason
P.O. Box 8665
Riverside, CA 92515-8665
http://www.wild-adventures.com
http://www.naturepics.net
----- Original Message -----
From: "Julie Bergman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, February 02, 2001 8:53 AM
Subject: Re: [Gecko] klemeri info
> Welcome David,
>
> Sounds like you just want info about eggs here? I am not sure exactly what gestation
>is for
> P. klemmeri, for most gex about 30 days. Correct me if I am wrong please. I incubate
>for
> females at 80F, males at 90F. Those temps work well if your incubator does not
>fluctuate.
> Humidity level - about 50-70 range during the day works well.
>
> The real trick to breeding them is keeping them at 95F-100F in the basking spot. You
>will see
> some real "action" when you get them up to temp!
>
> Julie Bergman
> http://www.geckoranch.com
> GGA lifetime member
>
> David Macias wrote:
>
> > Hello Folks,
> >
> > I'm new to this list and would like to get some input from some of you who raise
>klemeri.
> >
> > What is the gestation period for eggs?
> > Temperature range?
> > Humidity range?
> >
> > Do any of you have recipes for making smoothie.
> >
> > Thank you all in advance for your comments and answers.
> >
> > Sincerely,
> > David Macias
> >
> > ------------------------------------------
> >
> > "You were born an original, don't die a copy."
> > --John Mason
> >
> > P.O. Box 8665
> > Riverside, CA 92515-8665
> > http://www.wild-adventures.com
> > http://www.naturepics.net
> >
>
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