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  1. #11
    BPnet Veteran Adam_Wysocki's Avatar
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    Sounds good Marla .... personally, I wouldn't risk it! :mrgreen:

    -adam
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    "The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing."
    - Anna Sewell, author of Black Beauty


  2. #12
    BPnet Veteran Marla's Avatar
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    Well, Adam, as we know, everyone has different ideas about acceptable risk levels. :shock: You may already have guessed that I am quite the daredevil, living life on the edge.
    3.1.1 BP (Snyder, Hanover, Bo Peep, Sir NAITF, Eve), 1.2.3 Rhacodactylus ciliatus (Sandiego, Carmen, Scooby, Camo, BABIES ), 1.0 Chow (Buddha), 0.2 cats (Jezebel, PCBH "Nanners"), 0.3 humans
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  3. #13
    BPnet Veteran Adam_Wysocki's Avatar
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    Red eye tree frog

    ROFLAMO .... Marla, YOU ROCK! ... LOL
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    "The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing."
    - Anna Sewell, author of Black Beauty


  4. #14
    BPnet Veteran Marla's Avatar
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    Sometimes I roll, too, but that's a different story ...
    3.1.1 BP (Snyder, Hanover, Bo Peep, Sir NAITF, Eve), 1.2.3 Rhacodactylus ciliatus (Sandiego, Carmen, Scooby, Camo, BABIES ), 1.0 Chow (Buddha), 0.2 cats (Jezebel, PCBH "Nanners"), 0.3 humans
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  5. #15
    BPnet Veteran SatanicIntention's Avatar
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    I was wondering how you would clean it out if your snake went to the bathroom in it? Would you have to tear it all apart just to clean it? It's a good idea and very creative how she came up with the idea. It just seems like it would be a pain in the butt to clean and disinfect, even if you coated it with a water resistant product. My humid hide it made out of a 7-layer dip circular(7-8"in diameter and 2" high) container. I have a wash cloth in there that I rinse and wash every other day or so, and all I have to do is pop the lid off of the container. I would really worry about mold in that hide like Marla and Adam said.
    --Becky--
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  6. #16
    BPnet Veteran Adam_Wysocki's Avatar
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    Good point Becky! .... Personally I tend to be a fan of keeping things simple and easy to clean. Decorative is great, but I've seen too many decorative cages sometimes get a half a shake at being cleaned because of all the work it invloves. Lets face it, everyone leads busy lives and cleaning is soooo important to keeping a healthy ball python! .... If you can put the time in to have a nice fancy decorated cage and keep it clean thats awesome! ... But, simple works very well too.

    -adam
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    "The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing."
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  7. #17
    BPnet Veteran SatanicIntention's Avatar
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    I love simple... Amani's hides are clay pot bottoms and one clay pot broken in half longways and the plastic humid hide, which she has been using the past few days(shedding time). She lives on newspaper too. It's so easy to clean. I just have someone hold her for 5 minutes while I wash the tub out in the bathtub. The only "natural" thing she has in there is this 3-pronged grapevine/log thing. Seems to like it, but she's usually too lazy to get on it I'll probably get her a river rock or something to rub on and use the vine for a boa(when I decide the time is right to get one). Yep, Adam, I agree with you 100% on the K.I.S.S. Method. It's just makes my life that much easier.
    --Becky--
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  8. #18
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    Hello and thank you for the warm welcome.

    You can avoid the mold problem by treating the inside of the half log hide with 4-5 coats of polyurethane (clear satin finish). It's what many cage builders use when building cages with untreated wood. Give it a week or two to air dry before introducing it into the cage (until the odor is gone). This was in my original post.

    Cleaning is simple. The half log is just sitting on the plastic base. If you want to replace or clean the sphagnum moss, just lift up the hide. That also makes it easy to sanitize as well.

    IMHO there's nothing wrong with a plastic box with a hole cut in it, or newspaper for a substrate, but I prefer a natural setting for my animals. Herps are a hobby for me, and their cage is part of that hobby. It's always a toss up between ease of cleaning and esthetics. The more cage furniture you have the more you have to clean.

  9. #19
    BPnet Veteran Adam_Wysocki's Avatar
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    Hypo Albino (for Kara)

    Quote Originally Posted by Neumann
    You can avoid the mold problem by treating the inside of the half log hide with 4-5 coats of polyurethane (clear satin finish). It's what many cage builders use when building cages with untreated wood. Give it a week or two to air dry before introducing it into the cage (until the odor is gone). This was in my original post.
    Sorry about that, I totally missed it! I feel like a dumb a#$ now!

    Quote Originally Posted by Neumann
    IMHO there's nothing wrong with a plastic box with a hole cut in it, or newspaper for a substrate, but I prefer a natural setting for my animals. Herps are a hobby for me, and their cage is part of that hobby. It's always a toss up between ease of cleaning and esthetics. The more cage furniture you have the more you have to clean.
    That's awesome, almost like having two hobbies in one!

    -adam
    Click Below to Fight The National Python & Boa Ban




    "The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing."
    - Anna Sewell, author of Black Beauty


  10. #20
    Registered User imitha's Avatar
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    Re: You can make your own humid hide.

    Quote Originally Posted by Neumann View Post
    Greetings,

    I've seen some post on this forum regarding humidity chambers so I thought I would share this. My daughter made this natural looking humidity chamber for her anery (corn snake) and photographed it. We also have one for our royal. It's really simple to make and costs next to nothing to make.

    Supplies:
    An appropriately sized half log hide
    A pair of scissors
    A piece of paper
    A fine point marker
    A short length of rubber tubing (medical type)
    A semi rigid piece of plastic


    Step 1
    Trace the outline of the hide base on a piece of paper.

    Step 2
    Trace the ends of the log hide on the piece of paper.

    Step 3
    Cut out the oval shaped template from the piece of paper and wrap it around the log making sure it fits neatly and tightly.

    Step 4 (example)
    The plastic my daughter used was the box from a software package from Costco.

    Step 5
    Trace your paper pattern onto the plastic.

    Step 6
    Cut the pattern out of the piece of plastic and fold then ends around your hide to ensure it has a nice snug fit. This will prevent it from drying out as quickly.

    Step 7
    Use something round to trace an appropriately sized hole on one end of the plastic. The whole should be somewhat larger than your snake at its fattest point.

    Step 8
    Take a length of medical tubibg and slit it lengthwise from end to end, making sure that you cut straight, without twisting the tubing. Open the slit and slide the tube around the edge of the hole you previously cut in the plastic . This is important so your snake does not cut his belly going in and out of the hide. Finally, place some damp sphagnum moss inside the hide (ZooMed Terrarium moss will do fine). Your snake now has cozy place to hydrate when it needs or wants to.

    Be sure the wood has been sanitized by baking it in the oven before introducing it into the cage. If your worried about mold, you can put 4 coats of clear satin polyurithane (sp?) on the inside of it. If you do, be sure and give it about a week to dry so there's no oder left.


    Cheers,
    Jason



    [/img]
    Is baking this type of wood safe? What temp and for how long would u bake it at

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