Thanks! I don't mean to brag, but my male's condition has gotten beautiful compared to his last home.
According to texts in numerous books I have read they can reach up to 41cm in length (snout to vent length is approximately 15cm). Adult weight wise according to the texts ranges from 80-100 grams. Ripley, my female, is 11cm snout to vent length - last time I measured her - with a tail length of 20.5cm. She weighs 56 grams and is an enthusiastic eater. She's wild caught as a baby at the start of the year, approximatly late summer I think, and I've had her since she was 6.4cm (SVL) and weighed 10 grams, mind you, I didn't start keeping a record until after a month of keeping her. Purchased her early June. Smaug, my male, is 10.5cm snout to vent length with a tail length of 20cm. Last time I weighed him he was 52 grams. I got Smaug at the start of September and he was wild caught sometime this winter.
They both appear to be obligate insectivores as far as I can tell. My male doesn't touch plants or inanimate objects at all. My female, a few weeks back, once ate a dandelion flower but didn't touch them after that, but she will take inanimate objects such as freshly dead insects. Both don't touch pellets. I still provide them with greens and pellets in the hopes of one day they will start consuming them.
I did think about using sand at one stage (it looks great though, doesn't it?) but it's a bit messy for me. I saw someone with some Dwarf Bearded Dragons and they used sand, it looked great but there was dust everywhere, and it leaked out of the enclosure and when he opened his glass sliders there was a horrible screeching sound caused by the sand.
The Dragons spend probably 80% of their time perched as high as they can anyway.