Hi Sherron,

I have a couple older geckos that I help shed now and then, and I hold them on their backs. They seem more comfortable that way, and I think the heat from my hand helps too. I put my palm over their back and my thumb on their belly and between their front legs, with the point of my thumb toward their head. I hold gently, cause their lungs are under my thumb. This leaves the feet up and the tail free ;-) However, these are mad mads (Phelsuma madagascariensis madagascariensis) and about 8" long, so a lot bigger to work with! I'm not sure how you'd manage that with Li'i, but maybe you can think of something.

Blessings,
Melody

Sherron wrote:
Aloha, Melody

Thanks for the info on Ed's, I will see if they can ship to me. Or will see if Sunshine will take me with your references. So much appreciated! ;)

We are trying to get that tail skin off again and are having so many problems! We thought she was hard to handle before, but now she is a little terror!! She is faster than a speeding bullet -- must be all those fruit flies she is eating! We don't know how to actually hold her down -- we are afraid we will break her, as she is so tiny and she is really fast! She is only holding still for a fraction of a second -- she knows the drill now, and all the tricks to get away.

Dennis tries to wet her skin and get a grip with the tweezers while I try to keep her from leaping off his lap. But she is a real moving target!

And now she is doing something else that has us worried -- she keeps opening her mouth really wild and gaping. She doesn't make any noise so I don't know if she is gasping for air or not, but I don't think we could hear her if she was. I know she hates what we are doing, but we aren't sure if she is really in distress or not. My husband got worried so we put her back in the steam bath to loosen the skin up some more (it moved only a tiny bit), but I wondered if you could shed some light on the gaping. I know some animals, like birds, can actually die from emotional distress, but I don't think geckos fall into that category. Will it hurt her if we continue even though she is showing signs of acute distress? Or could there really be something wrong with her that we just haven't noticed before? I know she was eating today as I saw her catch and eat at least a couple of fruit flies earlier this morning.

Or is the little stinker smarter than us and has just gotten us figured out already and knows what buttons to push? ;)

Cooston where I grew up wasn't much of a town, either. And we lived about 10 miles outside of it anyway. The closest "big" town to us was North Bend/Coos Bay. I have very fond memories of Oregon, though. It was a great place to grow up, especially for a tomboy like me. I always loved all the animals and the woods ... I had pet frogs, salamanders, timber beetles, snakes, lizards, chickens, crawdads, chipmunks, anything I could get my hands on. I used to drive my poor mom wild. ;)

Oh and the berries! There is no place like Oregon for the berries! Salmonberries, huckleberries, thimbleberries, blackberries .. yumm! My best friend and I drove from Southern California up through Oregon to where we lived about 10 years ago and stopped for blackberries along the way every place we spotted them! Great trip! ;)

Thanks,
Sherron

Melody Hartley wrote:

Hi Sharron,

I get fruit flies from Ed's Fly Meat, http://www.edsflymeatinc.com.
They're near Seattle Washington. (There is no Ed, that's for Erin and
Dave -- nice folks!) If they can't ship to Hawaii they might know of
someone near you who keeps dart frogs and would help.  I'd suggest also
getting a bag of their fruit fly medium so you can raise your own.  It's
pretty easy, and I can give you some tips if/when you get to that.  I
think they sell supplements too, so might have the Rep-Cal.  If your
gecko gets UVB from natural direct sunshine (not through a window) you
don't need the kind with D3 in it.

Elizabeth suggested Sunshine Mealworms, and I agree.  They're in
Silverton Oregon.  I think they are not taking new mealworm customers
for a while, but you might tell them that Elizabeth and I recommended
them and maybe that will make a difference ;-)

You mentioned that you thought the old skin on Li'i's tail is getting
tighter. She is probably just growing on your hand-fed gourmet diet!
Geckos store fat in their tails.  An idea on removing the skin:  See if
you can get it to split by using 2 pairs of tweezers and gently pulling
on the edge closest to her body.  This probably would need a second
person holding the gecko.

Aloha is about 10 miles west of Portland, between Beaverton and
Hillsboro.  It's not exactly a town -- everything runs together here now
and it never was much of a town.  But I like the name too ;-D

My geckos would love some of those big fruit flies!  I'm sure you can't
ship them to Oregon though, LOL!

Best of luck!
Melody

Gecko wrote:

Aloha, Melody

Flightless fruit flies!! Wouldn't she like that!! I will have to google for them and see if I can get them into Hawaii! I have to have an import license to have mealworms shipped to me to feed the geckos! Right now, we are having problems finding someone to ship quickly enough in the summer, even with the license. We need a good supplier that ships from somewhere near the west coast as all the places I know are mid or east coast. A mealworm import license is $50 a year for unlimited shipments -- and they all go through Honolulu for inspection! If flightless fruit flies are on the list, they would cost the same. Hawaii actually has a great endemic fruit fly that is huge -- about the size of a small house fly. Too big for our little Preemie girl as it is almost the size of her head! Pretty neat, though!

Yes, I would be interested in your source for the flies. I can always ask them if they ship here. We did find a small scissors on a Swiss army knife, so my job has become easier and faster, thank goodness! I can sometimes now just hold them with my fingers and clip them! Much easier! ;)

We are watching the tail skin. I worry that it is too tight on her. And it seems to make her tail less flexible. But we dread trying to get it off, as she really seems unhappy when we try to work on her tail. Not that she liked the rest of it, but that part always bothered her the most and she would take off like a bolt!!

Hey, I am a webfoot as I was born in Oregon in Myrtle Point! We moved away to England for a year when I was 11, 'though, so I am not real familiar with where places are. I have not heard of Aloha in Oregon, but I sure like the name! ;)

Mahalo,
Sherron

Melody Hartley wrote:

Aloha Sharron,

You are so patient and dedicated!! This little one is so lucky to have you, since I'm sure she would have been someone's lunch otherwise. If she goes on eating fruit flies, you know you can raise flightess fruit flies, and that might be easier. I do that because I keep a few dart frogs, but I use them for hatchling geckos too. You'd have to get a starter culture from someone, or get one shipped to you if allowed, and keep them strictly separate from the flying ones because "flightless" is a recessive gene. I can give you more info if you're interested.

Do you have the little bugs in the soil called springtails? Or any other tiny bugs you could catch, maybe aphids? I'd hate for you go blind clipping fruit fly wings, LOL!

As to the last bits of shedding, she might lose the extra skin on the next shed. I've only gotten the tail skin off by peeling front to back, like turning a cone inside out.

The town in Oregon that I live in is named "Aloha" although pronounced differently -- emphasis on the "lo" part and a soft "h" -- ah-LO-ah.

It's also nice to see some activity on this list ;-)

Melody

Gecko wrote:

Aloha, Melody

Thanks for these ideas. I never thought of a paintbrush, but that would be softer and probably hold the moisture better. ;)

Her toes kept sticking to the washcloth, so we did lay a paper towel on top of it and she liked that better.

Now that she is back in her regular house, she is on banana leaf with red ti, honeysuckle, and helekonia. We used to have her on paper towels, but she really seems to like the banana leaf and we have tons of them. And the red ti is her favorite for hanging out on. And all the day geckos like the helekonia -- that and the bananas are their favorite hangouts ... along with our lanai and house. ;)

Mahalo,
Sherron



Melody Hartley wrote:

Slightly different method -- I use a paper towel rather than a washcloth in the humid box, and float the whole box in a sink full of warm water for the heat. A small soft paintbrush can also be helpful for wetting the old skin and working it loose.

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

And Aloha Sherron ~
Thanks for these details. Please try the humidity chamber near a lamp for a few hours. Use a wet washcloth that has been wrung out and place it in the vented, plastic container. Watch the water droplets form. After only a few hours I imagine her skin might be loose enough to start a split.

Another idea! Have something like a twig, small branch, or a section of choya wood --- something rough that she could snuggle up against to assist in the shed.

I hope the skin shed helps her right leg work more efficiently!
Keep us posted! Wish I lived near the beach in a place warm enough where geckos roamed freely ;-] Elizabeth

    Aloha, Elizabeth

She is about 3/4" from nose to vent -- she is the smallest day gecko
    hatchling we have ever seen, although some of our mourning gecko
    hatchlings are even tinier.

This sounds like it might work! If it would just soften enough to pull off her or get a split started, I think we could get the neck
    skin off.  We have been misting her little cage and putting a
    heating pad next to it, but that only helps a little and wasn't
    keeping the humidity up high enough.
She has never seemed to be able to fully control her right leg, and her right foot is smaller than her left and the toes kind of clumped together. She often tends to move the joint and leg together as a unit, so there may be something wrong with the joint, too. Although in watching her with the skin problem, some of that may just be the
    skin being so tight it restricts her movement.

    Usually when we find the hatchlings, most of that first skin has
already been shed, but she was fully covered with it and it has only recently started splitting. We do think it hinders her use of her limbs -- her arms are only about the size of thin pencil lead, and
    the skin seems to fully coat those.

She has been doing okay up until the last couple of days, though,
    when the skin (I hope that it isn't something else, too) started
really becoming a problem. She now gets around by lurching her body back and forth because her little arms & legs are still encased in
    the skin, although it has come off some of the back.  And she is
    green underneath, not gray!

We haven't ever actually kept any of the geckos before, as they run all around our house, lanai and garden (Phelsuma laticauda, house - Hemidactylus frenatus, & Mourning - Lepidodactylus lugubris). But we had to make an exception in her case, since she couldn't fend for herself. Usually we just take the hatchlings outside so they have a
    better chance of survival -- we have lots of big geckos running
around inside and they don't last long if we don't get to them first. :(

    Mahalo, Sherron






    [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

    Hello Sherron ~

Try the humidity chamber trick. I can't view your photos at home because my laptop is really memory-challenged, so I don't know how
    big this gecko is!  However, my mourning geckos are 1" 3/8" at
    hatching.  Try placing your gecko in a vented plastic container
    with a damp washcloth inside.  Place this near a light.  Almost
    immediately you will notice beads of water accumulate on the
sides/top of the container. After a few hours or so perhaps you
    can remove the rings of old skin around her neck gently with a
    tweezers or small scissors.

What is the problem with her right leg? Might you have a new pet
    here?

    Elizabeth

    Subj:[gecko]Question on hatchling Gold Dust Day Gecko having
    trouble shedding "egg skin"
    Date:6/1/08 4:16:39 PM Pacific Daylight Time
    From:    [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Sherron)
    Sender:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-to: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
    To:    [email protected]

    We found a tiny hatchling on May 13 that was a little
underdeveloped and was still in that grayish skin they have when
    they first come out of the shell. She was dehydrated and has a
    problem with her right leg, but is spunky.

We haven't been able to release her outside like we do the rest of the hatchings we find, as her bad leg has kept her from being very
    mobile, but she has been doing pretty well eating tiny bugs &
    aphids I collect for her. She has also shown a real interest in
    the fruit flies around her papaya, but I don't think she has
    managed to catch any yet.

    But she started having trouble yesterday and was real cold &
clammy, so we put a heating pad near her cage to help warm her up. It seems to have started her molting her "egg skin", but she has a
    bunch of it around her neck that she can't get off.

Is there anything we can do to help her? She is so tiny we don't
    see how we could try to cut it off! The rest of the skin except
for around her neck should slough off okay, but the stuff around
    her neck is several layers and is a ring, so it may be another
    matter. :(

    Any help would be greatly appreciated as she is really a spunky
    little girl.

Mahalo, Sherron







-----Original Message-----
From: Gecko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Mon, 2 Jun 2008 11:21 am
Subject: Re: [gecko]Question on hatchling Gold Dust Day Gecko having trouble shedding ...

Aloha, Elizabeth

She is about 3/4" from nose to vent -- she is the smallest day gecko hatchling we have ever seen, although some of our mourning gecko hatchlings are even tinier.

This sounds like it might work! If it would just soften enough to pull off her or get a split started, I think we could get the neck skin off. We have been misting her little cage and putting a heating pad next to it, but that only helps a little and wasn't keeping the humidity up high enough. She has never seemed to be able to fully control her right leg, and her right foot is smaller than her left and the toes kind of clumped together. She often tends to move the joint and leg together as a unit, so there may be something wrong with the joint, too. Although in watching her with the skin problem, some of that may just be the skin being so tight it restricts her movement.

Usually when we find the hatchlings, most of that first skin has already been shed, but she was fully covered with it and it has only recently started splitting. We do think it hinders her use of her limbs -- her arms are only about the size of thin pencil lead, and the skin seems to fully coat those.

She has been doing okay up until the last couple of days, though, when the skin (I hope that it isn't something else, too) started really becoming a problem. She now gets around by lurching her body back and forth because her little arms & legs are still encased in the skin, although it has come off some of the back. And she is green underneath, not gray!

We haven't ever actually kept any of the geckos before, as they run all around our house, lanai and garden (Phelsuma laticauda, house - Hemidactylus frenatus, & Mourning - Lepidodactylus lugubris). But we had to make an exception in her case, since she couldn't fend for herself. Usually we just take the hatchlings outside so they have a better chance of survival -- we have lots of big geckos running around inside and they don't last long if we don't get to them first. :(

Mahalo, Sherron






[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Hello Sherron ~

Try the humidity chamber trick. I can't view your photos at home because my laptop is really memory-challenged, so I don't know how big this gecko is! However, my mourning geckos are 1" 3/8" at hatching. Try placing your gecko in a vented plastic container with a damp washcloth inside. Place this near a light. Almost immediately you will notice beads of water accumulate on the sides/top of the container. After a few hours or so perhaps you can remove the rings of old skin around her neck gently with a tweezers or small scissors.

What is the problem with her right leg? Might you have a new pet here?

Elizabeth

Subj:[gecko]Question on hatchling Gold Dust Day Gecko having trouble shedding "egg skin"
Date:6/1/08 4:16:39 PM Pacific Daylight Time
From:    [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Sherron)
Sender:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-to: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
To:    [email protected]

We found a tiny hatchling on May 13 that was a little underdeveloped and was still in that grayish skin they have when they first come out of the shell. She was dehydrated and has a problem with her right leg, but is spunky.

We haven't been able to release her outside like we do the rest of the hatchings we find, as her bad leg has kept her from being very mobile, but she has been doing pretty well eating tiny bugs & aphids I collect for her. She has also shown a real interest in the fruit flies around her papaya, but I don't think she has managed to catch any yet.

But she started having trouble yesterday and was real cold & clammy, so we put a heating pad near her cage to help warm her up. It seems to have started her molting her "egg skin", but she has a bunch of it around her neck that she can't get off.

Is there anything we can do to help her? She is so tiny we don't see how we could try to cut it off! The rest of the skin except for around her neck should slough off okay, but the stuff around her neck is several layers and is a ring, so it may be another matter. :(

Any help would be greatly appreciated as she is really a spunky little girl.

Mahalo, Sherron


~~~geckos make my heart sing (and dance)~~~

l l l ^^ /..\ ^^ /..\ ^^ ^^ /..\ ^^ l l ^^ llll \\\ l l llll ///
       l  l                    llll                      \\\
       l  l  ~~              llll                      ///
  ~~  (                ~~    )   ~~         ~~   (    ~~
           )                   (                            )
        (                        )                       (
           )                   (                            )
lappert(a) robert(a) hubert(a) 17.50 yo r.i.p. r.i.p.
                            (All Lepidodactylus lugubris!)



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