T O P I C R E V I E W |
jaleely |
Posted - 28/08/2011 : 08:26:27 I see a lot of people making vivs out of wood...they look great! But How do you deal with keeping moisture in there without destroying the wood over time? I've seen one where someone put tile down on the bottom, but what about the ambient humidity? Also tile is heavy. I was thinking of doing the wood thing, but then putting down thin sheets of not acrylic from the hardware store...then silicon-ing it up. Kind of making a clear plastic tank (minus front opening lid, which could be sliding glass or acrylic) inside the wooden viv/shelves. What I really would like is a solid waterproof bookshelf looking vivarium...I have 7 snakes...only one of which is a hognose (adding more in November, hopefully :), the others are going to get at least 4-8 feet each. Right now we have one huge 4 ft tank on the floor (well lifted a tiny bit off the floor on cinder blocks) but I'm trying to figure out what to do in the future! |
3 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
andi |
Posted - 17/09/2011 : 18:24:04 was gonna say.....didn't think the western hoggies needed extra humidity |
jaleely |
Posted - 29/08/2011 : 04:52:25 huh! So maybe i'm over-thinking it. We have two ball pythons, a carpet python, bolivian boa, two dumeri's boas and the hoggy. |
Kehhlyr |
Posted - 28/08/2011 : 23:02:44 There's only a few snakes that would require a level of humidity that could damage or swell wooded vivs up. Rainbow boas, and Tree Boas are a couple that I can think of off the top of my head. All my snakes (kings, BCi, Hoggies, milks) don't require any extra humidity then what is already in the the normal atmosphere. Maybe when shedding a damp hide, but that's only a small tub with a little opening so doesn't impact on the wood. |
|
|