You sort-of agreed to this.

A simple daily check-in so your reptile’s taken care of.

A simple reptile care app made for overwhelmed reptile keepers.

Owning a reptile isn’t difficult - but it can feel surprisingly easy to miss things. You find yourself double-checking, just in case. Did they eat enough this week? Have you actually covered everything today? Is the snake even in its enclosure???

You try to keep it all in your head. Sometimes you Google things, just to be sure. And even then… there’s still that slight feeling you might have missed something.

ScalySidekick gives you a simple place to check in, so you’re not trying to keep everything in your head. It’s just a short daily list of the essentials — nothing overwhelming, nothing extra — and once you’ve ticked things off, you know you’re done.

At its core, ScalySidekick is just a simple daily check-in. You open it, see what needs doing, and once it’s done, you can stop thinking about it.

If something extra comes up, you can add your own reminders - things like changing a bulb or picking up food - without it turning into a long list.

There’s also space to jot things down as you notice them, whether that’s behaviour, feeding, shedding, or just a quick photo you want to keep.

And when you need to double-check something, the basics are right there - temperatures, humidity, feeding - all laid out simply.

If you’re ever unsure, you can reach out to us directly in the Support section.

We created ScalySidekick because we’ve been there.

We spend a lot of time with new reptile owners - at parties, in homes, in schools - and the same thing comes up again and again. Not big problems, not complicated questions. Just that quiet uncertainty. The feeling of not being completely sure you’re doing things right.

Most people aren’t looking for more information. They’ve already got that. What they’re looking for is a way to feel a bit more settled. To know they’ve covered the basics, and not have it sitting in the back of their mind all day.

That’s why we built this. Not as a system, and not as something you have to keep up with — just a simple way to check in, take care of what matters, and move on.

It’s the same approach we take with everything else. Keep things calm, keep things clear, and make sure both people and animals feel safe and supported.