Re: Enclosure backgrounds
Once upon a time I tried one of the Zilla 3D backgrounds that come with some of their 40 gallon breeders, but my BP would wedge himself behind it in such a way that I ended up just taking it out. I would hate for you to spend money on one of these really nice backgrounds just to have to constantly remove it if/when your snake gets stuck behind it. Not to mention the cleaning issues. I love the stick on aquarium backgrounds that most fish stores sell, they cling to the back of glass enclosures and give you a cool background, but I prefer not to use anything inside the enclosure other than normal décor. Hopefully if you're set on using these someone has some more experience with them, but for me the inserts like that just didn't work out.
Re: Enclosure backgrounds
I have a Universal Rocks background I bought many years ago for a fish tank, that I never used. Was a large one... the background I think being 48" long by 24" tall. I've toyed with the idea of using it in a PVC enclosure for a long time. But, I never actually did it, whether it be because I want to be sure I can sanitize easily, and also because I don't think that "look" goes well with all snakes. Though... I do think the specific background I have would work nice in the woma enclosure.
I'm following this thread for now. And, can hopefully can contribute more if I decide to go ahead and use the background.
The background I have is an exact duplicate of what I have in my fishtank pictured here.https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...9e2f0c47ac.jpg
Re: Enclosure backgrounds
Also... "maybe" you can avoid the snake going behind the background by siliconing the background in place, avoiding any way for the snake to get behind it. So... needs to be explored, because I agree it's a problem if the snake gets behind the background.
Re: Enclosure backgrounds
Quote:
Originally Posted by
JodanOrNoDan
I wouldn't put anything in the enclosure that does not need to be there especially anything porous. Snakes do stupid stuff. I was down with COVID for a few weeks and I had babies hatching. We were short on tubs so my wife had to prep more. She made one airhole a tad too big. Long story short I walked in the snake room one morning and there was a baby stuck by its head in the airhole. I ended up having to cut the tub off of the snake. The hole it got its head through was less than a centimeter in diameter but still larger than the normal holes. I watched him when I put him in a new tub and he tried it again... More stuff just means more potential problems in my world. The decor is for you not them. They could care less.
All that said I use F10 to disinfect everything. I use bleach after a clutch is laid and put in the incubator. You have to be careful with bleach though. Everything must be rinsed and dried before the animal goes back in.
So scary, finding a baby snake with it's head stuck in a vent-hole- that could not have been fun, carefully cutting him free from the tub. And they sure DO remember what "worked" (or almost worked) before, & they try it again. I'm so glad you got to him in time. I don't care how nice some "decor" might look, it's all about safety first for me too. Snakes do some weird crazy things sometimes.
Re: Enclosure backgrounds
I have a Universal Rocks backdrop and ledge combo in with one snake, and a background feature rock in with another. I've attached both by screwing the fixtures into the back wall so they're flush flat against it and then going around and sealing the edges of the fixture with silicone so there are no gaps. Never have had a problem with a snake (or their mess) getting behind them.
There's no way to truly disinfect any porous surface -- Universal Rocks products, wood, non-impervious PVC, or otherwise. I just spot and deep clean the Universal Rocks stuff with Dawn, water, and a good scrub as needed. As long as the backside soft foamy bits are sealed away and you're not dealing with any nasty bugs, it's enough to keep things clean. Your normal cleaning procedure sounds like it would work just fine! Just be a little careful if you're using diluted bleach -- it's great as a disinfectant, but sometimes bleach can eat away at things such as plastic.