» Site Navigation
1 members and 484 guests
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.
» Today's Birthdays
» Stats
Members: 76,073
Threads: 249,220
Posts: 2,572,808
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
|
-
Re: Ceramic Heathers?
When I read the title I immediately pictured little ceramic Heathers wearing red caps with big green shoes, blue shorts and red vests.
But they all had white beards.
It's already been a very long day.
I may not be very smart, but what if I am?
Stinky says, "Women should be obscene but not heard." Stinky is one smart man.
www.humanewatch.org
-
The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to wilomn For This Useful Post:
ballpythonluvr (01-26-2010),Kaorte (01-25-2010),LadyOhh (01-25-2010),waltah! (01-25-2010)
-
Registered User
Re: Ceramic Heathers?
uhm , what had that to do with the post? ;/ lol
-
-
Re: Ceramic Heathers?
 Originally Posted by DarkSmoke
uhm , what had that to do with the post? ;/ lol
You made a typo that said "ceramic heathers" and ladyohh's real name is heather so they thought that was funny.
-
-
Registered User
Re: Ceramic Heathers?
lol that typo again.
any way , more answers to my question anyone? :/
-
-
Registered User
Re: Ceramic Heathers?
hmm seems like no one has got answers. just to say it again for those who didn't understand. This is not the ceramic heater petshops sell that are like bulbs, but a ceramic plate wich throws heat from underneat.
and what i asked for since someone here told me balls can't have a cool side of 69-71F like i have, is to put one of these and heat the whole vivarium to a tempreture without a tempreture gradient but of course put the tempreture on less then the usual like the guy that sold me mice do.
-
-
Re: Ceramic Heathers?
Let me see if I can picture this for you.
This person uses a large ceramic plate which sits under the tank/tub/viv, therefore, the whole enclosure is the same temperature all the time, correct?
He says he keeps all of his various species of snakes with this kind of setup, and that is why you came here to see what we thought of the method, I am right?
I know that different species all have different needs, and there is nothing to say he can't successfully keep his ball pythons with this method for quite some time.
The real question becomes, how long has he used this method, and can he say with certainty it is not harmful in the long term. I don't mean 2 years or 4, or even 10 years. If balls can live 20 - 30 years if properly cared for, has he kept them using this method long enough to be sure it doesn't shorten the lifespan, or cause health problems after so many years?
I have been to many, many ball python breeders websites, and every single one of them recommends that a ball be provided with a warm side and cool side for health reasons. Since many of these people have had balls since they were first imported into the US, I'd believe them over the opinion of one person.
Or, if you choose to use the ceramic plate he is suggesting, could you set it at the proper temperature for the hot side, and perhaps use something heat resistant under the cool side to block some of the heat and still keep your gradient? That might be a workable option if you can find something suitably heat resistant, because the plate would be around 90-95 all the time, and you wouldn't want heat to damage what you are using, or worse. Perhaps something like what we call "pot holders" here. Pieces of special cloth material which you use to pick up a hot pan.
Just throwing some ideas out there for you.
Gale
1.0 Low-white Pied - Yakul | 1.0 Granite het Pied - Nago
1.0 Mojave - Okoto | 1.0 Vanilla - Kodama
1.0 Pastel - Koroku | 1.0 Fire - Osa
0.1 het Pied - Toki | 0.1 het Pied - Mauro
0.1 Mojave - Kina | 0.1 Blushback Cinnamon - Kuri
0.1 Fire - Mori | 0.1 Reduced Pinstripe - Sumi
0.1 Pastel - Yuki | 0.1 Dinker Normal - Akashi
0.1 Ghana Giant Normal - Tatari | 0.1 Dinker Normal - Kaiya
-
The Following User Says Thank You to angllady2 For This Useful Post:
-
Re: Ceramic Heathers?
Ball pythons do better with a heat gradient. I'm certain that he can keep HIS snakes with no heat gradient, because I've seen people keep ball pythons alive without heat, although how LONG they stay healthy is debatable.
If it's a ceramic pad that goes under the vivarium, vs a UTH(which is a heating pad that goes under the vivarium) I don't get the difference?
If you mean, does the snake REALLY need a cool side and a warm side, I would say yes, it does. You can still heat one end of the cage, but you'll still be using a thermostat to control the temps. How hot does the ceramic heat pad get? Hot enough to burn your snake?
If the heat is on one end of the cage, you should have a cooler side and a hotter side. Whether you can get the PROPER temps doing this with the set-up you are talking about is something we cannot tell you. We don't know what sort of vivarium, what sort of ceramic heatpad you're talking about, or what your natural ambient tempurtures are.
If you're just wanting someone here to go "Oh sure, do what that guy does, it's great!" you'll probably be out of luck. Generally the care of the pythons means trying to give them a temputure gradient, so they can move from warmer to cooler as needed.
Theresa Baker
No Legs and More
Florida, USA
"Stop being a wimpy monkey,; bare some teeth, steal some food and fling poo with the alphas. "
-
The Following User Says Thank You to wolfy-hound For This Useful Post:
-
Registered User
Re: Ceramic Heathers?
 Originally Posted by angllady2
Let me see if I can picture this for you.
This person uses a large ceramic plate which sits under the tank/tub/viv, therefore, the whole enclosure is the same temperature all the time, correct?
He says he keeps all of his various species of snakes with this kind of setup, and that is why you came here to see what we thought of the method, I am right?
I know that different species all have different needs, and there is nothing to say he can't successfully keep his ball pythons with this method for quite some time.
The real question becomes, how long has he used this method, and can he say with certainty it is not harmful in the long term. I don't mean 2 years or 4, or even 10 years. If balls can live 20 - 30 years if properly cared for, has he kept them using this method long enough to be sure it doesn't shorten the lifespan, or cause health problems after so many years?
I have been to many, many ball python breeders websites, and every single one of them recommends that a ball be provided with a warm side and cool side for health reasons. Since many of these people have had balls since they were first imported into the US, I'd believe them over the opinion of one person.
Or, if you choose to use the ceramic plate he is suggesting, could you set it at the proper temperature for the hot side, and perhaps use something heat resistant under the cool side to block some of the heat and still keep your gradient? That might be a workable option if you can find something suitably heat resistant, because the plate would be around 90-95 all the time, and you wouldn't want heat to damage what you are using, or worse. Perhaps something like what we call "pot holders" here. Pieces of special cloth material which you use to pick up a hot pan.
Just throwing some ideas out there for you.
Gale
Yes you understood me 100% correct. thanks for the helpfull info, i think i will still go with the UTH then. my only question remains, how much damage am i doing to the ball python since she has a cool side of 69-71F :/
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|