Rack Owners advice needed!
Question: So as my ball python begins to grow i begin to look more and more into tubs, mainly a rack system. My question is, to get right to the point, my room in the winter will only be 68 degrees obviously as the seasons change spring--->fall will not be an issue. I'm concerned that the ambient air temps will not be appropriate for housing a ball python.
Background: My ball python is currently housed in a 10 gallon tank with a 100 watt infrared heat lamp that is on a rheostat to control the temp at 80 degrees. I have an UTH hooked up to a ranco i wired myself that keeps her basking spot at 90 degrees. Humidity is always between 50-60% and when those fantastic blue eyes come stays at 70% all the time with intense supervision to ensure a good shed.
Behavior: She usually is always on her cold side of her enclosure, this holds true until she has been feed she will lay on her warm side! [which is expected as she uses the heat to help aid in digestion.
Hypothesis: Knowing my snake is more prone to the cold side of her enclosure now and uses her belly heat efficiently i don't see why it would be too big of a deal to swap over to a rack. My thoughts are the temps might be lower in the winter months... but in reality I'm sure in the {winter} months in Africa the temperature changes as well. I feel that their will just be a larger difference in temperature for her to thermo-regulate. For example her basking spot always staying at the text book range 89-92 [some people prefer differently] and her cold side what i would expect to be with no heat tape or lamp providing heat on that side to be anywhere from 10-15 degrees different.
I asked an anonymous rack company who is very large and trusted in the industry what their thoughts were...
Quote:
In a 68 room temp you would probably want belly heat for what I am guessing is Ball Pythons? That is still a little cool, you will get a basking spot of about 88 ok but the rest of the tub will run a bit cool. It has been done quite successfully but will not match up with textbook conditions.
Conclusion: Would like to know if anyone else is in the same position as i am in with a cold room and this works for them or what they did! I know getting a portable oil heater [the ones they say at wal-mart would be an easy-fix, and wiring it to its on ranco or thermostat] this is not an option for me. So I'm reaching out to see what people think and if they have done this successfully.
Thanks ahead of time for those who take the time to share their experience and wisdom!
Lilly - The pastel Ball :snake:
Mike - The chemist filled with questions! :rolleye2:
Re: Rack Owners advice needed!
Thank you for the reply! Knowing the rack i want to get either a DIY or a Retail rack, i will make sure the bottom of the tubs are insulated. CURRENTLY i have Styrofoam boarding under my ten gallon which allowed for some insulation to heat the hot spot to the desired temp. I can understand something with a lot of air circulation can cause what you explained to happen. A rack with 5 sides covering the tub with enough air flow to provide oxygen to the reptile is what i will be after. NOT a rack system that leaves the tubs exposed.
With that said its not a question of getting the basking spot to desired amount. Its a question of in this theoretical situation the basking spot IS 90 Degrees and the ambient air temp is like 70-75 is their any harm for the temperature being that low. Now at first read you would assume well the floor on one side would be 90 and then the air 70-75 but in reality the heat coming off the floor and the humidity will help bring the ambient air temps up as well. SO the snake will still have a place to thermo-regulate from 70-90 degrees which i don't see a problem? If the snake is provided the heat it needs and if it gets too hot it will move away?
Also this is only 1/4th of the year this would happen which I've read multiple places females and balls in general eat less and are conditioned by nature to adjust to the climate change. Its known in some parts of Africa the temperatures to get down to 50 degrees ...
Also from the above quote from the unknown retailer brings up a good debate. I understand the conditions that KEEPERS have set up and observed optimal behavior. This optimal behavior is not REALISTIC these are human controlled equilibrium we have set up. Any given day out in a natural habitats will their warm spot stay 90 degrees or their cool spot stay 80 degrees.
With that said this whole question basically loops back to has anyone done this?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Simple Man
No amount of heat tapeis going to heat the ambient air enough. You need to get your room temps up to the high 70's. I was having problems with my first DIY rack until I realized that my ambient room temp was just far too low for the heat tape to make any sort of difference. I had a low hotside even until I bumped up the room. I can't see risking your animals by attempting to just try with a high 60's room temp. It isn't going to work.
Regards,
B
Re: Rack Owners advice needed!
This is the response i was looking for! thank you :gj::gj::gj:
My current routine is me waking up, misting [taking her out as she is still active that early and mixing and spraying the substrate], checking temps on both sides [adjusting the rheostat/thermostat if need be]. Getting home from work doing the same... getting ready for bed DOING THE SAME! The fact that you only check maybe twice a day is awesome!
Awesome tubs will get rid of the annoying spray the top layer of substrate flip repeat flip repeat with no heat lamp the humidity will be 100% better.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Aes_Sidhe
I had similar problem.... My room in winter sometimes drops to 70-72 degrees.. i bought RBI 32 qt rack with 4"belly heat option.. I have Accu-rRite thermometer with probe in every tub..
Sometimes in winter I need to crank my thermostat to 107 degrees to keep hot spot 88-90 degrees and cold 76-78... i have only 2 BP so checking temp before i go to work and after work everyday is not a big problem for me.. It could be done.. but it's connected to constant checking temp in tubs everyday or even 2x a day...
Re: Rack Owners advice needed!
Thanks for the replies guys and thanks for the pictures! I'm going to continue to research the racks and find out if i do like any retail racks or if I'm going to build one myself to allow optimization for the cold weather.