You have a bearded dragon. You also have a cat, or a dog, or a gecko, or maybe all three. The question feels natural:...
Bearded dragons are Ferguson Zone 3 animals — among the highest UV-requiring reptiles kept in captivity. In the wild, they bask in direct Australian...
One of the most common mistakes bearded dragon owners make is not establishing a relationship with a reptile-specialist vet until their dragon is already...
Bearded dragons are a long-term commitment that many new owners underestimate. A healthy, well-cared-for bearded dragon can live 10–15 years — well past the...
Understanding bearded dragon genetics is the difference between breeding randomly and breeding deliberately. If you’ve ever wondered what percentage of a clutch will be...
Most bearded dragon vet bills in the first 90 days of ownership trace back to a single moment: picking an animal without knowing what...
To a pet owner, the name of the pet is more than just a name – it's the definition of their relationship. And when...
The blackening starts at the tip. Then it spreads upward, millimetre by millimetre, until there’s a visible line where living tissue ends and dying...
Most new keepers know they need a thermometer. Many skip the thermostat, planning to check temperatures manually and adjust when needed. This works —...
Bearded dragons don’t tell you when something is wrong. By the time a symptom is obvious, the condition has often been developing for some...