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*** Winter Storm Warning *** ...... How do you protect your snake room ??
My g/f and I were just talking about this snow storm that is expected to smack the Northeast this weekend, and it came to our attention we still have not invested in an emergency power supply to plug our thermostats and incubator into in the event power goes down for several days. I plan to put an electric oil heater in the center of the snake room to keep the ambient temp in the room up, but ofcourse I am going to need a way to power my three thermostats for my snakes, my thermostat and fan on my incubator, and also the heater for the ambient temps. I am looking at generators and what not now trying to figure out what is good enough and pushes enough power to take care of all the above items. So I thought this may be an interesting thread to see what everyone's "Plan B" is, in the event mother nature gives us a rough time. What do you use and what's your set up in such an event?? ****** Story's of past experiences welcome ******
Last edited by T_Sauer; 01-21-2016 at 12:56 AM.
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Re: *** Winter Storm Warning *** ...... How do you protect your snake room ??
I don't have nearly as large a collection as you so when there was a winter storm and we were pretty sure we would get a blackout I read somewhere that putting your snake in a separate box and putting those hand warmer packets like you'd use when you ski in with it it'll keep the temp fine. The power never went out so I never had to try that and not even 100% sure that that's an ok thing to try so I'd be interested in what other people do
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I generally don't lose power where I am and if I do, it is usually only for 6 hours at the most. Except a couple months ago where I lost it for about 18 hours. For me, its just Mr Heater in the snake room and wait it out.
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Re: *** Winter Storm Warning *** ...... How do you protect your snake room ??
 Originally Posted by imitha
I don't have nearly as large a collection as you so when there was a winter storm and we were pretty sure we would get a blackout I read somewhere that putting your snake in a separate box and putting those hand warmer packets like you'd use when you ski in with it it'll keep the temp fine. The power never went out so I never had to try that and not even 100% sure that that's an ok thing to try so I'd be interested in what other people do
The hand warmers that we use for outdoor activities like your talking about get to hot for snakes (at least direct contact) I assume this could be manageable with several layers between contact of the box and the hand warmer but would take some experimenting
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I'm old fashioned. Wood burning stove to the rescue. Gets the snake room up to about 80 and can keep it there quite easily. Even with no power, it'd be enough for them to get by. I have a small generator in the garage as well.
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Re: *** Winter Storm Warning *** ...... How do you protect your snake room ??
 Originally Posted by imitha
I don't have nearly as large a collection as you so when there was a winter storm and we were pretty sure we would get a blackout I read somewhere that putting your snake in a separate box and putting those hand warmer packets like you'd use when you ski in with it it'll keep the temp fine. The power never went out so I never had to try that and not even 100% sure that that's an ok thing to try so I'd be interested in what other people do
NOT "hand warmers"!! They get way too hot and they only stay hot for a short period of time...neither of which is any good for the snakes.
You should go to ShipYourReptiles or any other shipping supplier and order real Heat Packs. They come in different measurements and you want 40 Hour Heat Packs, minimum. They also come in 60 hour and 72 hour versions. Any of those will work. They should be ordered in advance to have on hand when an emergency hits. You can't find them at your local pet store or Wal Mart.
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Re: *** Winter Storm Warning *** ...... How do you protect your snake room ??
I have a buddy heater in the snake room, keeps the room at 80, and I have a generator for the rest of the house that allows us to keep running the essentials including the incubator and for our personal heat a wood stove, between all that I am prepared.
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I have only lost power for more than a few hours once in twenty years, so I just ordered some heat packs for insurance.
I plan on getting a generator at some point down the road.
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I'm in western Pa, so I understand your concerns with this weekend. Looks like either of us could get it really bad, or really bad. LOL.
Here are some ideas:
1. Personal computer battery backup (UPS) depending on how much you run off of one of these, and it's size, it could last 5 minutes, or maybe a couple of hours.
2. Quilts. covering your racks/enclosures with some good old-fashioned quilts would be a good insulater to keep some heat in. I think for an hour or two, this would be a viable solution to keeping some heat retained. even better if you have them warmed up to room temp before the heat goes out.
3. Kerosene or propane heaters. You have to be careful with these, obviously, but some of them are safe to use indoors and are fairly inexpensive. I wouldn't leave them unsupervised at all, but they could work in a pinch.
4. Generator - really the best solution in my opinion...
5. I hadn't heard of the heat packs mentioned above from the reptile shipping places, but I'll definately check them out to maybe have some on hand.
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Re: *** Winter Storm Warning *** ...... How do you protect your snake room ??
 Originally Posted by T_Sauer
My g/f and I were just talking about this snow storm that is expected to smack the Northeast this weekend, and it came to our attention we still have not invested in an emergency power supply to plug our thermostats and incubator into in the event power goes down for several days. I plan to put an electric oil heater in the center of the snake room to keep the ambient temp in the room up, but ofcourse I am going to need a way to power my three thermostats for my snakes, my thermostat and fan on my incubator, and also the heater for the ambient temps. I am looking at generators and what not now trying to figure out what is good enough and pushes enough power to take care of all the above items. So I thought this may be an interesting thread to see what everyone's "Plan B" is, in the event mother nature gives us a rough time. What do you use and what's your set up in such an event?? ****** Story's of past experiences welcome  ******
Of everything you listed the incubator is most at risk. The snakes can survive for a while at room ambient if you can maintain 75*F. I wouldn't feed until after the storm passes; if the power goes out then empty snake bellies are a good thing.
The problem with the incubator is that digital thermostats may not "like" generator power as it can be dirty, so make sure you have a surge protector between the generator and the thermostat, and check it constantly.
Personally we have a backup generator that powers the wood stove blower so the house stays warm, and we moved a cord of firewood into the garage last night so we won't have to dig it out of the snow - one forecast has us getting 45 inches of the stuff! At least I won't have to worry about keeping the refrigerator and freezers running, Mother Nature is taking care of that.
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