I finally found some time to get around to the vivarium build again.

To summarize: I'm converting 20G high aquariums into front door opening, vertical crested gecko vivariums with bioactive substrate (no monthly substrate changes) and automated misting.

This installment of the series is about my substrate.

First things first, I want to give a shout-out to dendroboard.com and vivariumforums.com for having lots of information on this subject available. I'm not a regular poster on either, but have been stalking them for my viv plans for a while now

I've been using a product from Josh's Frogs called ABG (Atlanta Botanical Gardens) Mix in my hatchling carpet python display cages for over a half year, and am super happy with it. It's a mix of 5 different substrate parts/conditioners. After trying various substrates with herps for years, I've decided that I just plain love this stuff and have no inclination, no desire, and no need to try anything else for a good long while.

Big pluses for ABG mix:
- It doesn't break down or decompose itself very fast
- it harbors beneficial bacteria and microfauna very well
- it is wonderful for plants of all varieties
- it holds moisture but still drains nicely and doesn't become waterlogged if you have a drainage layer below it
- it doesn't compact as much as other substrate choices, and holds air pockets nicely (which plays a part in many of the above benefits)

Normally this stuff has been suggested as a good substrate for dart frogs, but it's performed very well in less wet conditions as well, so it also is proven in a wide variety of environments.

You can go ahead and purchase it directly for a reasonable price from Josh's Frogs, but I've decided I like this stuff so much (and I have some future plans using it) that I might as well get some real bulk to have available. I went ahead and purchased the ingredients to mix my own (which IS quite a bit of work FYI), so here's how to do it yourself!

Most recipes I found online use the same ingredients, with some variation in size of particular ingredients. Here is what I used:
- 1 part fine tree fern fiber
- 1 part peat moss (aka peat sphagnum)
- 1 part untreated, plain hardwood charcoal (Cowboy brand), crushed with a hammer to be various sizes from very fine up to 1'' chunks
- 2 parts long fiber sphagnum moss (NOT peat), milled in a blender
- 2 parts fine orchid bark

I purchased the peat and charcoal locally at a Fleet Farm or Home Depot, and everything else online.

First I had to mill the long fiber sphagnum. I used a cheap second-hand blender from the local thrift shop, which is good because I correctly predicted I'd start to burn out the motor with the amount of blending I had to do. I basically would blend a handful, and in a few seconds it would be a little more coarse than sawdust, but still surprisingly fine for just being blended.





Next I laid down a sacrificial bath towel for smashing charcoal. You can use any heavy object, hammers work well, large-headed heavy slegehammers work better and go faster. I started with a mallet and that worked fine, but then my gf found a big heavy closed-ended metal pipe I could stand and pound with. That went really fast. The idea is to break the large chunks down to various sizes, with the largest being smaller than 1''.



(before and after, from right to left)


Pics of the other ingredients:

Peat



Tree fern fiber


Orchid bark


I took all the ingredients in their respective proportions by volume, added them to a round garbage can, and mixed.. both with my hands and by putting on the lid and shaking/rolling/turning.

Here's the end result!






I'm going to store it dry, but will put it in a bucket w/water and stir to moisten the soil before adding it to a cage (squeezing out excess water). It helps me make sure that any soil I add has been pre-moistened without being too waterlogged.

Hope you liked the write-up! Keep an eye out for our next installment where I think we'll go over drainage layers below the main substrate.