Hi Liz,

I'd forgotten what the problem with Spoon was specifically, but if the other 
two are not eating, and it's been a while but no significant weight loss, 
force feeding may be too stressful for them. (but depending on what you mean 
exactly by forcefeeding.  try enticing them to eat by dipping an end of a 
waxworm or cricket into baby food, and dabbing a bit on their lip...when they 
instinctively go to lick off the baby food off their lip, try offering the 
food into the mouth as it's open.  I've also found that if you use tweezers or 
chopsticks it freaks them out less.  This has worked well for me in the past, 
and not just with Leos.

good luck, and hope this helps.

-Karin Chan

>===== Original Message From [EMAIL PROTECTED] =====
>Hey all,
>
>I wrote a while ago about my Leo Spoon. My two females who were housed with
>him a while before I discovered his problem are starting to show the same 
signs
>of being ill. I took Spoon to 6 vets, I can't afford to take these two. Right
>now they are still keeping weight, I am doing warm water soaks and keeping
>their temp at 80 flat. I dont know what else to do. If they dont take 
crickets
>or wax worms today I am going to start force feeding. Any other ideas?
>
>Liz
>_______________________________________________
>Global Gecko Association
>http://www.gekkota.com
>Classifieds
>http://www.gekkota.com/cgi-gekkota/classifieds.cgi
>gecko mailing list
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>http://lists.gekkota.com/mailman/listinfo/gecko

_______________________________________________
Global Gecko Association
http://www.gekkota.com
Classifieds
http://www.gekkota.com/cgi-gekkota/classifieds.cgi
gecko mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://lists.gekkota.com/mailman/listinfo/gecko

Reply via email to