Bearded dragons don’t make much noise, but they communicate constantly — through posture, colour, skin patterning, and gesture. Learning to read these signals as...
A common misconception among bearded dragon owners is that any parasites found in a faecal test mean something is seriously wrong. In reality, low...
The insect you choose determines a big chunk of your dragon’s calcium balance and protein intake — and the wrong choice (crickets fed straight...
The basking light isn’t just a heat source — it’s the thermoregulation engine of the entire enclosure. A bearded dragon that can’t reach the...
Eye problems in bearded dragons are one of those conditions where the temptation to “watch and wait” can lead to permanent damage. As Dr....
When you feed a cricket to your bearded dragon, you’re also feeding it whatever that cricket last ate. If the cricket has been sitting...
You check the enclosure one morning and your bearded dragon is completely still, barely responding, and won’t touch food. Your first thought is that...
Impaction is a digestive blockage — indigestible material accumulates in the intestinal tract until the dragon cannot pass it on its own. Here is...
For adult bearded dragons, vegetables and greens aren’t a garnish — they’re 70–80% of the diet. Getting this right means more than just avoiding...
Metabolic bone disease is the most common serious illness in captive bearded dragons — and the most preventable. It develops slowly, often invisibly, until...