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temperature ?!

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  • 04-24-2013, 10:03 AM
    Tikall
    If your temps really are stable at 80-83 then you don't need to provide the heat pad. These snakes like it a bit cooler most of the time. I provide heat spots for most of my snakes personally because I figure why not, but they have all done fine without them too.

    And unless you have a thermostat, do not use the heat pad. It will get far too hot.
  • 04-24-2013, 11:22 AM
    DNACurtusK
    We have a snake room, and we go by ambient temp. No heat pads. It's 80-83 during the day and 78-80 at night usually. No URI or anything of that nature here, ever. Everyone is happy and sheds fantastic.
  • 04-24-2013, 12:33 PM
    KMG
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by JoeNapoli View Post
    It does in fact address the question. It demonstrates how a setup can eliminate the need for a heat pad while still creating a temp range. Yes my bloods climb up mounds of cypress mulch. Some of them, sometimes, also hide/burrow. No pic but time permitting I will make a short vid. 48 24 15 is nice, much better than many that are cramped into drawers. I've used many cages like that on & off over the last 30+ years. Tubs are cheaper, lighter, easier to move, and offer more depth/height. Cages are more aesthetically pleasing, and offer visual access thru glass.

    Yes and a 3 foot tall cage is a complete waste on a terrestrial animal. You can get the same effect much easier with a short(height) long cage that has a heat lamp over one end that will offer a full temp gradient that can be fully utilized by a terrestrial animal.

    The reason I said you were not addressing the op's question is because they simply asked about a temp range without offering us their cage type or other heat element info for their setup. Instead of answering about the temp range of a blood you suggested to use a ridiculously tall cage for a burrowing ambush predator. If you take a container like you suggested and put a mound of mulch in it tall enough to create a temp gradient how much mulch are you wasting? It just does not seem financially sound. Also in a heated room the gradient between the top of the mound and the floor of the container is not going to be enough to make having that large box sitting in a corner worth it, imo. I would much rather do it like I do with a heat source on one end giving my animal the most floor space as possible.

    My gtp is in a 2 foot tall cage so trying to picture a mound of mulch, branches, or shelves to create a gradient in a 3 foot cage for a snake that can weigh over thirty pounds just seems silly. To each their own. If you think a setup like that is best for a blood that's fine I just think its far more of a waste in space and materials that are not actually beind used by the animal.

    So you only use tubs, but not in racks? How do you store them in your home? How many snakes do you keep?

    I know you think Youtube is a wealth of knowledge but I don't and I don't want you to waste your time making a video for me. I just wanted a simple picture that could maybe get your point across better than you originally did.
  • 04-24-2013, 12:43 PM
    thawes
    I offer a hot spot of 82-83 and most of my snakes stick to the cooler side at 78-80.

    OP please don't put any stock in what Joenapoli has to say, he clearly has no understanding of this species....
  • 04-24-2013, 06:20 PM
    JoeNapoli
    Re: temperature ?!
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by KMG View Post
    ... If you take a container like you suggested and put a mound of mulch in it tall enough to create a temp gradient how much mulch are you wasting? So you only use tubs, but not in racks? How do you store them in your home? How many snakes do you keep? ...don't want you to waste your time making a video for me...

    I'm not wasting any mulch. Correct tubs only not in racks. They're kept in a walk in closet. 8 at the moment. Is wasn't a waste of time, I enjoyed making it :P
  • 04-24-2013, 08:02 PM
    KMG
    Re: temperature ?!
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by JoeNapoli View Post
    I'm not wasting any mulch. Correct tubs only not in racks. They're kept in a walk in closet. 8 at the moment. Is wasn't a waste of time, I enjoyed making it :P

    Well where is the video? I still don't understand how making a video is easier than taking a few pics.
  • 04-24-2013, 08:21 PM
    JoeNapoli
    Re: temperature ?!
    just PM'd it to u
  • 04-24-2013, 08:27 PM
    JoeNapoli
    Re: temperature ?!
    this 1's not mine, but discusses cages vs racks:


    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=srCCvqeaz8U


  • 04-24-2013, 09:49 PM
    KMG
    I see a few issues.

    The first is you are monitoring the temp of area the snake can not get. Of course next to the water will be a bit cooler but that doesn't matter when the snake can not get in that zone.

    The next is how you have the half logs stacked. With the power of a blood I would not trust them as being a stable platform for a blood to move in and around.

    Then the mound of mulch is not enough room for a large blood to get comfortable. My big girl(>14lbs) never coils tightly like other snakes. She instead prefers to lay around loosely and sometimes in a line against the cage walls. Also there is no way a blood could coil and have must of its body on the highest point of the mulch to stay it what is said to be your warmest spot.

    I also personally do not like that no light can really penetrate the type tub you have. I try to give all my animals a proper light cycle even though I am not breeding. I personally feel it provides them with a better living.

    Your way may be cheap but it is not proper and I don't believe you should try to get others to follow your lead on unproven and uncommon husbandry practices.

    I have seen you make comments about your years of snake keeping but the years by themselves do not mean much. Plenty of people keep snakes in substandard conditions and the snakes survive not because of the owner but because of their tough nature. Though they can seem delicate I believe they are much more resilient than some give them credit.

    I don't know you and don't have anything against you but I have seen many post made by you that have given bad advice to noobs in the hobby. Your post are constantly being attacked but you continue down your path. I would hope that you could keep your questionable husbandry habits to yourself so you do not harm a new snake owners new pet.
  • 04-24-2013, 11:28 PM
    JoeNapoli
    Re: temperature ?!
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by KMG View Post
    I see a few issues.

    The first is you are monitoring the temp of area the snake can not get. Of course next to the water will be a bit cooler but that doesn't matter when the snake can not get in that zone.

    The next is how you have the half logs stacked. With the power of a blood I would not trust them as being a stable platform for a blood to move in and around.

    Then the mound of mulch is not enough room for a large blood to get comfortable. My big girl(>14lbs) never coils tightly like other snakes. She instead prefers to lay around loosely and sometimes in a line against the cage walls. Also there is no way a blood could coil and have must of its body on the highest point of the mulch to stay it what is said to be your warmest spot.

    I also personally do not like that no light can really penetrate the type tub you have. I try to give all my animals a proper light cycle even though I am not breeding. I personally feel it provides them with a better living.

    Your way may be cheap but it is not proper and I don't believe you should try to get others to follow your lead on unproven and uncommon husbandry practices.

    I have seen you make comments about your years of snake keeping but the years by themselves do not mean much. Plenty of people keep snakes in substandard conditions and the snakes survive not because of the owner but because of their tough nature. Though they can seem delicate I believe they are much more resilient than some give them credit.

    I don't know you and don't have anything against you but I have seen many post made by you that have given bad advice to noobs in the hobby. Your post are constantly being attacked but you continue down your path. I would hope that you could keep your questionable husbandry habits to yourself so you do not harm a new snake owners new pet.

    Thank you for watching the vid, and we appreciate objective, constructive criticism. It's in short supply. (Comments re the other vid? the one re cages vs racks?)

    The snake in the vid actually CAN settle in next to the water receptacle. We made sure of that when placing inside the tub. And we have seen him there a few times during the last couple of months. If/when all of our snakes are in that position then we'll know to decrease the temperature in the room. Snakes can send us behavioral clues that supercede the technology we use. What if our temperature gauge were to give incorrect readings? We would know, because all the snakes would be in the coldest, or hottest, area of their housing. What if the humidity gauge were to be incorrect? We would know, because skin sheds would be fragmented.

    Yes half stacked logs can become a problem with power of bloods. As of now I trust them as being a stable platform. Amendments will have to be made as they approach maturity. Cementing them together is an idea I've toyed with.

    The mound of mulch is enough room for a small blood to get comfortable. If/when they approach >14lbs and never coil tightly then, again, amendments will made. (Though I am left wondering if mature bloods in the wild would ever naturally attain a size that prevents coiling, would seem counterproductive, difficult to conceal the body from predators and difficult to conceal during ambushes ... and what, exactly, constitutes obesity, and what an ideal weight is - but that's another thread) There is in fact a way a blood could coil and have most of its body on the highest area of the mulch. The highest points would, however, tumble down a few inches as they move about. I intentionally loosen it up for them, as them seem to prefer it vs compacted mulch.

    We also personally do not like that no light can really penetrate the type of tubs we have. We have been giving a lot of thought lately to circadian rhythms, and are considering purchasing clear lids, perhaps glass or plexiglass, to allow indirect sunlight to enter.

    Our way is cheap vs cages, not cheap vs racks. No way is proper, there are many ways to skin a cat. I don't try to get others to follow our lead on anything. To each his own, different strokes for different folks, whatever floats your boat.

    You are correct, years of snake keeping by themselves do not mean much. Unfortunately it has however caused many so-called experts to become closed-minded, to become intolerant of ideas that contradict their very own, and to become arrogant. They are legends in their own mind, and that's something they'll need to contend with on their own terms. Many of them have their own agendas for being here. As I become more adept at identifying their rhetoric I can more efficiently ignore them.

    I neither know you nor anyone else on this board, and I aim to keep it this way. I am not interested in who is posting what, as long as it may possibly contribute to the body of knowledge &/or be thought provoking. A perfect forum is anonymous. I neither join nor contribute to forums in search of cyber friends, "thumbs up", "likes", etc. I am not of that generation. I couldn't care less of what anybody on any forum anywhere in cyber land thinks of me personally as an individually, they neither sign my paycheck, sleep in our house, nor are neighbors of our community (I use the term "community" in its original definition, the one where people say "hi" to the faces of their neighbors, not the new cyber meaning.) I have nothing to sell. I have no fancy avatar, no signature logo to recruit members to another forum.

    If/when you deem bad advice is being disseminated then you should chime in, unbiasedly and factually. That my posts are being constantly attacked is meaningless to me. Mosquitos attack more viciously. No one's husbandry habits can possible help or harm new snake owners' pets, unless of course the practices are followed. We must assume all readers here are mature enough to decide for themselves, to make up their own minds, and to implement what they fit.
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