A bearded dragon’s beard turning black is one of the most visible and frequently misunderstood signals in reptile keeping. Most of the time, it’s...
Your dragon was brownish-orange at lunchtime. By morning, it looked almost black. Did something go wrong overnight? Almost certainly not. Bearded dragons use their skin as...
Your dragon is up on its hind legs, pressing its nose to the glass, sprinting back and forth along the wall. Is it panicking?...
You reach into the enclosure and your dragon puffs up, darkens its beard, and flattens itself against the back wall. Or maybe it runs,...
Your dragon has gone grey and dull. Its eyes are bulging. It won’t eat. It’s scratching itself against every surface in the enclosure. Is it...
Stuck shed is one of those problems that starts as an inconvenience and becomes a medical emergency if you’re not paying attention. Most stuck shed...
You have a bearded dragon. You also have a cat, or a dog, or a gecko, or maybe all three. The question feels natural:...
Pet stores house them side by side. Breeders pair them for reproduction. The internet has plenty of photos of two dragons piled in the...
Breeding bearded dragons looks simple on the surface — put a male and female together, eggs appear, hatchlings emerge. The reality involves months of...
If your bearded dragon has laid eggs, you have a narrow window to get them into proper incubation conditions. Eggs don’t need days of...