Found it. And for anyone else who wants to see something amazing here it is.
http://www.tortoiseforum.org/threads/cherryhead-triplets.32460/
http://www.tortoiseforum.org/threads/cherryhead-triplets.32460/
And just read that thread. Wow!!!!!! Do you know by chance what had happened to those triplets?Found it. And for anyone else who wants to see something amazing here it is.
http://www.tortoiseforum.org/threads/cherryhead-triplets.32460/
Pearls.And just read that thread. Wow!!!!!! Do you know by chance what had happened to those triplets?
Congrats on all those babies. They are all super cuteAnother hatched, so got 4 now, 2 eggs remaining. One of these 4 weighed in at 15g and another at 23g. . Quite a difference, all seem fine though.
I have 14 hatchlings. 10 more eggs in incubator.How many of them to you breed now? I lose the over watch
I'm sorry to read about the twins! The new hingebacks are so cute and look perfect!
Not sure if I misunderstood that question. I have hatchlings from 4 females.How many of them to you breed now? I lose the over watch
I'm in the US. Sunny Florida!Thank you.
Where in the world do you live Journey.
That's what I have on the substrate, a layer of coir. Then a mix of leaves,orchid bark and bits of debris from under the trees outside, makes good for pillbugs too.Those hatchlings are just too cool looking! You can just imagine them disappearing in the dead leaves of a forest floor.
That's what I have on the substrate, a layer of coir. Then a mix of leaves,orchid bark and bits of debris from under the trees outside, makes good for pillbugs too.
I thought one of my adults had got out of the enclosure the other day, talk about panic, anyway I found her totally burried in the substrate under leaves. Even when I moved the leaves(which I had done already trying to find her) you could hardly see her, not even 1 full scute.
At this time I had let the enclosure get too dry, so she dug down right into the moist substrate below. Bit of useless info, but it got me wondering if this is what they would do in the wild in times of a dryer periods to keep moist.