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BPnet Veteran
Re: Any Tips on Reptile cooling in Extreme weather?
 Originally Posted by Vilenica
Thanks for the tip with the sand that seems worth trying. I was trying to pull together a way to use ice packs (economical, can be cycled easily) a large pack on one side of a tub would definitely affect the ambient temp.
Yeah, that worked for me, but I only had to do it for one week. I'm not sure what Florida's weather is typically like, but it would be worth a try. But like I said, it could take some toying around with before you get it at a good temperature. You may need to add or take away sand to get it right.
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BPnet Veteran
Re: Any Tips on Reptile cooling in Extreme weather?
I'd worry more about humidity in south FL than heat (we're talking 80-100+% all summer, and very frequent rain). You can get rid of the heat to an extent, but in a screened in patio, the humidity will be much higher than what is appropriate for Python regius. I would never risk keeping any of my collection outside if I still lived down in Ft. Lauderdale.
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Registered User
Re: Any Tips on Reptile cooling in Extreme weather?
Hello everyone,
Im new to the site and I was actually looking for information along these very lines. I live in Arizona so I am on the oppsosite extreme in terms of humidity. We do get temps above 100 degrees in the summer though. I am not looking to keep my BPs outside but I am looking to make my garage into the room where I plan to keep them once I get things prepared. I dont yet have snakes at the moment but I have had a few in the past (red tail boa and wetsern diamond back).
Dont know if this will help but one solution that I am looking at is to purchase a portable A/C unit for my garage to cool things down. I have been pricing them online. Wal-Mart has them starting in the high 200's...
I plan to get a good one and see how it works, then I will proceed with plans for creating a terrarium and snake purchase or rescue....
I hope this helps.
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BPnet Veteran
Re: Any Tips on Reptile cooling in Extreme weather?
Hey Flathead hunter that sounds like a pretty good ideal thanks for bringing that up I figured they would be much more $$ . I think that would solve my ambient temp issue especially if i could hook it up to flex duct and diffusers.
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Registered User
Re: Any Tips on Reptile cooling in Extreme weather?
If you're adamant about keeping them outside in a garage or patio, I would first take your thermostat and probes and figure out how hot it really gets at the hottest point and how cool it gets at the lowest point so you have an idea of exactly what you're dealing with, then you can decide whether it's practical or possible. Do it for a week, get an average, and you'll more or less be seeing what you are truly dealing with.
Is your house/patio shaded by trees? They are pretty much awesome heat diffusers (my house goes on the chilly side even during the summer because it's surrounded by large trees). Similarly, a room/house made of concrete will hold less heat than one made out of wood, so that may be something to look into. I visited a friend of mine whose family lives in Taiwan and their house is concrete and it's COLD (despite being in the unbearable hot sticky humidness that is Taiwan.)
If you're building a cover over your patio or building a new room, high ceilings will keep the room cooler and tin roofing will reflect more heat (courtesy of spending large majorities of my summers in south america in which the natives use these ways to keep cool because they can't afford AC)
Hope these ideas help!
Watch and wait; a hapless creature has wandered in wake of my growing hunger. My oh my, don't you look tasty? Hey traveler, what do you know of wolves?
All that's scaly and reptilian, all that's furry and mammalian, all that swims in the sea, all that flies in the sky--I love each and every one of these precious creatures.
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Registered User
Re: Any Tips on Reptile cooling in Extreme weather?
 Originally Posted by Vilenica
Hey Flathead hunter that sounds like a pretty good ideal thanks for bringing that up I figured they would be much more $$ . I think that would solve my ambient temp issue especially if i could hook it up to flex duct and diffusers.
Keep in mind, this is just an idea that I have been thinking about. Im not sure at all if it would actually work. My garage is attached to my home so its the same construction as the rest of the house, minus some insulation. Either way, I plan to use it as a work out room but if it gets cool enough, then I can procedd with my BP plans .
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Re: Any Tips on Reptile cooling in Extreme weather?
 Originally Posted by Vilenica
if you look at the weather in togo benin ghana where they come from its 78-99 degrees right now. they do live in the ground ... so wouldnt you say they could live in the ground in florida rather than shooting down keeping them outside together... thanks anyways but i was looking for a solution like using soils as substrate or .....
Soil is definitely not something you want to use. Just because of the possible fertilizer in it that the python can swallow or get in its mouth while roaming around or just swallowing soil in general.
It's a lot easier and less costly to keep a Ball python indoors in a plastuc tub with a UTH controlled by a thermostat. That's where she was getting at. And since they do not need much space to roam around anyways and like to be kept in smaller places you will not need a large outside enclosure.
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Re: Any Tips on Reptile cooling in Extreme weather?
 Originally Posted by Vilenica
Hey Flathead hunter that sounds like a pretty good ideal thanks for bringing that up I figured they would be much more $$ . I think that would solve my ambient temp issue especially if i could hook it up to flex duct and diffusers.
So, you're going to hook up a portable AC unit to your outdoor enclosure in Florida? The cost to operate that unit would be astronomical. It would never shut off. You would be pulling the humidity from the environment, not just the enclosure.
You came here looking for answers, I can't give you any to fit your situation. All I can say is to build an insulated enclosure, then use the AC unit or move the reptiles inside.
I know that's not what you wanted to hear, but I can't see a solution with your limited resources.
Good Luck!
Jim Smith
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