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Humidity issue
My BP is getting ready to shed. I am having issues keeping her humidity up. it has been ranging from 20-45% the last few days. She is a classroom pet. We mist her tank several times throughout the day and while we are here it will stay close to 50%. When I come back in at 7 am it is down to 20%. I took a towel today and got it damp and laid it on op of the cage and placed the light off to the side where the towel did not cover it. (No the light is not on top of the towel) I am hoping this helps. Any suggestions are greatly appreciated. I am thinking of buying a humidifer for my room bc the heat unit makes it so dry in here anyways.
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Humidity issue
You can see how the towel works out.
Assuming that you have have a screen top, it can rust.
Me and other members have found foil to work wonders.
I wrapped mine in cardboard to get a nice tight seal.
My top has a crossmember, so I have four pieces which works out great because at times my humidity gets too high and I can remove one or two pieces to regulate.
Best
http://tapatalk.imageshack.com/v2/15...7dc54ae936.jpg
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Wrapping it cardboard is a fantastic idea. I've never thought of that before but am definitely trying that one tonight.
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Unfortunately screen-top tank + heat lamp = low humidity. You can fix and fix all you want but you're fighting the laws of physics.
The other posters have given you some good options. I would add:
- Get a plexiglass top to put over the screen, with a hole cut in it where the heat lamp would go. It's not expensive and there's less of a fire risk than putting cardboard or fabric close to the heat lamp, especially if your students will be handling the snake and its setup.
- Make a humid hide. An inexpensive option is to get a plastic food-storage container large enough for the snake, cut a corner off of the lid for an access hole, and fill the container with damp spaghnum moss or put in a layer of damp cocoa-husk. The downside to this is that every snake I've provided with a humid hide also uses it as a potty, so it needs cleaning often and the snake can end up messy as well. The upside is the rest of the enclosure stays clean.
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Re: Humidity issue
Thank you for all the suggestions! Yes it is a screen top. The set up was bought with a classroom grant so the screentop is what came with it. I will definitely look at getting something different when I take her home this summer.
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Damp spaghnum moss and cypress are your friends ;)
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Re: Humidity issue
Quote:
Originally Posted by bcr229
Unfortunately screen-top tank + heat lamp = low humidity. You can fix and fix all you want but you're fighting the laws of physics.
The other posters have given you some good options. I would add:
- Get a plexiglass top to put over the screen, with a hole cut in it where the heat lamp would go. It's not expensive and there's less of a fire risk than putting cardboard or fabric close to the heat lamp, especially if your students will be handling the snake and its setup.
- Make a humid hide. An inexpensive option is to get a plastic food-storage container large enough for the snake, cut a corner off of the lid for an access hole, and fill the container with damp spaghnum moss or put in a layer of damp cocoa-husk. The downside to this is that every snake I've provided with a humid hide also uses it as a potty, so it needs cleaning often and the snake can end up messy as well. The upside is the rest of the enclosure stays clean.
What you say make sense. However in my case I was having a problem with TOO MUCH Humidity.
My adult snake was only staying on the cool side and laying in the water bowl. Thus splashing it out daily.
Humidity went to 80 + and temp dropped to 68 and she was loving it!
I've had all the foil caps off for 3 wks now to keep it stable at 60%.
Fire risk? The cardboard is wrapped, and keep it 1/4 " + away from lamp. It only gets warm.
So for the time being, I'm quite satisfied with coconut husk substrate and foil cap regulators for humidity control for me.
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as well as providing a temperature gradient, i make it a point to provide humidity gradients especially for snakes on shed process. there's a dry hide and humid hide. i do not want the entire enclosure to be too humid.
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Re: Humidity issue
Quote:
Originally Posted by Reinz
What you say make sense. However in my case I was having a problem with TOO MUCH Humidity.
My adult snake was only staying on the cool side and laying in the water bowl. Thus splashing it out daily.
Humidity went to 80 + and temp dropped to 68 and she was loving it!
I've had all the foil caps off for 3 wks now to keep it stable at 60%.
Fire risk? The cardboard is wrapped, and keep it 1/4 " + away from lamp. It only gets warm.
So for the time being, I'm quite satisfied with coconut husk substrate and foil cap regulators for humidity control for me.
Your problem is easier to fix by using a larger water bowl but only fill it 1/4 to 1/3 of the way up, so when the snake climbs in the water doesn't overflow.
Also, I was concerned with the fire risk since OP's snake is in an elementary school classroom environment, based on other posts. So, all one of the kids has to do is put that heat lamp in slightly the wrong spot, and that cardboard is going to scorch. You're likely more careful with your setup.
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I know a similar suggestion was made. I have several humid hides made out of Rubbermaid containers (but I swear I have a couple who just won't go in). So another fix I found is putting damp sharugum moss in their hides. It works fantastic during shed cycles.
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Re: Humidity issue
Quote:
Originally Posted by bcr229
Your problem is easier to fix by using a larger water bowl but only fill it 1/4 to 1/3 of the way up, so when the snake climbs in the water doesn't overflow.
Also, I was concerned with the fire risk since OP's snake is in an elementary school classroom environment, based on other posts. So, all one of the kids has to do is put that heat lamp in slightly the wrong spot, and that cardboard is going to scorch. You're likely more careful with your setup.
Ahh, great point about the school! :gj:
As as far as the water bowl, that is a good idea. Being so big, she pretty much manages to empty the bowl via splashing and soaking.
With your idea, less water, would be less humidity.
I will try that.
Thanks! :)
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Re: Humidity issue
I use a heat lamp and have a glass enclosure with a screen top. I keep a cool mist humidifier right in front of my cage aimed toward it, and it keeps the humidity at right around 55%. I also have moss on the cool side which I occasionally mist to keep it damp. Sometimes my husband wants the humidifier over night when his sinuses feel dry, so when we use it in our room, I mist the enclosure and cover 3/4 of it in foil wrapped cardboard until morning.
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Re: Humidity issue
The others pretty much covered it. As the oldest breeder here in Chicago hipped me, glass enclosures and heat lamps are the enemy. I made the bigger mistake of trying to start babies in 40 gallon breeders to last them their whole lives... thanks to listening to some guy at petsmart.
I downsized to smaller enclosures, use damp moss under the hides, aluminum foil covered plywood covering 75% of the screen, and rarely used the heat lamp unless keeping up the temp requires it.
Fast Shadow
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Re: Humidity issue
That post about them using the damp moss as a potty is 100% truth and explains a lot... but much less troubles with shedding since then.
Fast Shadow
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What kind of moss do I need to get??
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