I know they aren't the largest gecko, and I know this is off tangent...but either way...I think they'd appreciate and benefit from a little bit more space (I know that caresheets everywhere, even on Gekkota's web page state you can keep a trio in a ten gallon). I'm sure plenty of people have kept them successfully in small tanks, but I'd give them some room...and pleeeeeeeeenty of time. (All we've got is time) Though please keep in mind this is my personal opinion and belief it is not written in stone...
(But then again, I used to keep a lone female leopard gecko in a 35 gallon tank, and I have baby frog eyed geckos that have their own 35's too)
Personally, let's put it this way...
If you were crammed into a small bedroom to live with your partner for the rest of your life (along with her best friend in this case)...would you really be in the mood to "get the groove on"?
(No boys, don't answer that.)
(May I add it's glass walls and someone keeps coming in to check if anyone has been knocked up...)
I think you'd get more on each other�s nerves then anything else after awhile...
I'm sure the photo periods and such have a lot to do with it. Brumation and I'm sure their diet would play a part, temperatures, hell I'll even say the tank lay out would have something to do with it. (example: I highly doubt anyone would have much success with these guys if it was a bare tank, a twig, and a deli cup with soil in it...they aren't as open to voyeurism as leopard geckos are)
5 months? The secret is patience, you may not see anything for a year (as Neil mentioned).
Maybe they're shy, let them get to know each other first =)
My apologies if my sense of humor bothers people.
I like to look at the lighter side of things...
-PC
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