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  1. #1
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    Humidity question

    Hello!

    I have a honduran milksnake and it says online they need about 40-60% humidity. I have started to mist his cage morning and night, and I also used HVAC tape to cover the screen top of his cage, but still my humidity will get to the low 30's most of the time.

    Any tips?

    also here is a picture of his cage setup currently.
    https://imgur.com/a/Ts64Xzb

  2. #2
    BPnet Veteran Homebody's Avatar
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    Re: Humidity question

    Quote Originally Posted by jensond399 View Post
    Any tips?
    Swap the aspen out for a substrate that retains moisture better. I hear ReptiChip's good. A humid hide another idea. A larger water bowl would help too.
    Last edited by Homebody; 02-12-2024 at 08:10 PM.
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  3. The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to Homebody For This Useful Post:

    BeansTheDerp (02-12-2024),Bogertophis (02-12-2024),jensond399 (02-18-2024),Malum Argenteum (02-12-2024)

  4. #3
    BPnet Veteran Malum Argenteum's Avatar
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    I agree that Repti Chip is a great option. The snake should have a moisture gradient too, or at least some good choices. The snake should be able to choose its own temp (which you have, the heat lamp), but also choose the level of moisture in its immediate area. At absolute bare minimum it should have access to a moist hide. Better is both a moist hide and a dry hide in each the warm end and cool end of the cage (so the snake can be at any combination of temp and moisture level). It is easiest to provide a moisture gradient using a substrate like Repti Chip, and maybe tossing a little damp sphagnum under a couple of the hides too, and having those be in the moister areas. Snakes can burrow into the Repti Chip to find a really preferred set of conditions, too.

    I'd recommend keeping an eye on the snake, and not doing anything too crazy to accurately target some RH number that some AI wrote on the internet (RH meters aren't very accurate, anyway, for reasons that have to do both with hardware and with user variation). I've bred nelsons and pueblan milksnakes (now both the same species -- L. polyzona -- but it looks cooler if I list them the old way ) and kept one hondo hybrid for a bunch of years (my first snake, actually; I had her for probably ten years and then she went to a local camp nature center), and breed costa rican blacks currently. They're all quite tolerant of a range of RH.

  5. The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Malum Argenteum For This Useful Post:

    Bogertophis (02-12-2024),Homebody (02-12-2024),jensond399 (02-18-2024)

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