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Re: Type of preferred substrate
I think if you're not worried about aesthetics, unprinted lnewspaper is the best. It's the cheapest and can completely renew the entire enclosure easily and regularly which helps keep possible bacteria and nasties down. I have to think that simply scooping up stool from a shaving type sub doesn't guarantee cleanliness. Just my opinion.
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I use Dri-Dek on top of either newspaper or paper towels. It's impregnated with antimicrobial coating and the liquid in the urates drains to the paper on the bottom of the tank, so my angels don't fingerpaint with their pee until I can clean. Also no worries at all of anything getting stuck/ingested. It's also great for feeding in the tank, again nothing gets stuck to the prey. I love it!
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Re: Type of preferred substrate
I use about 70% orchid to 30% cypress. Holds humidity well without being to high. I think it looks better than Aspen and had a rough time keeping humidity up with Aspen. I keep her in a large exo-terra viv.
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Re: Type of preferred substrate
I use coconut husk I like how it holds the humidity and I have all my snakes in tanks with screen tops.
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I actually just switched from aspen to paper towels, mainly because of a major mite infestation, I finally got a handle on it. I also was having problems with the aspen, the snakes would sometimes get it in their mouths when feeding. I actually had one snake miss a mouse and get a mouthful of aspen and he could not get it out. So I had to grab him by the head and remove it. Probably won't ever go back to aspen again. Paper towels is fairly expensive for 18 snakes, I usually clean out several tubs twice per day with all those snakes. But it's quick and totally eliminates odors and seems to increase their feeding, almost all of them eat every time now, was never like that on aspen. And it holds humidity pretty good, I can crumple some up into balls and pour some water on them and it keeps it humid for a couple days, not too bad for a desert climate. I also love how I can see the poop and the mites, never knew my snakes went to the bathroom so much.
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cchardwick- i buy paper towels in bulk at costco
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Re: Type of preferred substrate
I use small birch chips specifically sold as herp substrate. it comes comparatively cheap in germany (in comparison to reptibark and similar), holds humidity well, looks great, is easy to spot clean, the chunks not too small and not too big (i still feed on a piece of stone slate though, just to be safe), doesn't block warmth too much, and actually smells pretty decent!
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Paper towels, I feel they're much cleaner vs. spot cleaning other substrates. No ingesting worries either. Used to use aspen.
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Re: Type of preferred substrate
Quote:
Originally Posted by cchardwick
I actually just switched from aspen to paper towels, mainly because of a major mite infestation, I finally got a handle on it. I also was having problems with the aspen, the snakes would sometimes get it in their mouths when feeding. I actually had one snake miss a mouse and get a mouthful of aspen and he could not get it out. So I had to grab him by the head and remove it. Probably won't ever go back to aspen again. Paper towels is fairly expensive for 18 snakes, I usually clean out several tubs twice per day with all those snakes. But it's quick and totally eliminates odors and seems to increase their feeding, almost all of them eat every time now, was never like that on aspen. And it holds humidity pretty good, I can crumple some up into balls and pour some water on them and it keeps it humid for a couple days, not too bad for a desert climate. I also love how I can see the poop and the mites, never knew my snakes went to the bathroom so much.
I had the same issue with aspen until I found it in the shaved form rather than the shredded form. The pieces are about 1/2" wide x 1/2" long (but curled) and paper thin. Unlike the shredded stuff that was like thousands of tiny aspen sticks that got everywhere, this stuff stays where it is supposed to be.
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Re: Type of preferred substrate
I just use newspaper in my tubs for ease of cleaning. Heat transfers well through it, it cleans east, the snakes love to use it as a hide also. I do have one normal that I keep in a tank in my living room and he stays on zoo meds forest floor bedding. This stuff holds water really well so I don't have to worry as much about humidity. It is darker, so unlike aspen it's a little harder to see when he pees in it, but I just spot clean weekly and completely change monthly.
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Re: Type of preferred substrate
I really like reptibark. Smells good, my BP loves it, and when you take them out to play and some of it is stuck on them, it isn't hard to clean up if it gets on the floor like coco husk, etc.
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I love aspen for ease of cleaning, doesn't make a mess, soaks up urine/urates so that the snakes don't become soaked in their own pee. My humidity where I live is fine even with aspen, so thank god it's not a problem.
But I just bought 3 bricks of eco earth coco fiber substrate for my green tree python, so I'll probably try some for my BP as well, just to see how it goes. :B
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Update on how MESSY eco earth coco fiber is. It sticks to the water bowl, sticks to everything, sticks to your fingers. Definitely only using it to layer the bottom of my green tree python's enclosure, not for my ground dwellers. :O Aspen all the way for the terrestrial snakes.
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I like Zoomed Forest Floor. It's really natural looking and holds moisture well.
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Recently moved to coconut husk and it's amazing. Only thing im wondering is if it is okay to pair ball pythons in it. I would figure the coconut would hurt the scent glands or something.
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