SteveW
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 4, 2015
- Messages
- 252
So while trying to make a different point yesterday, I inadvertently 'came out of the closed chamber', if you will, in regards to how I am raising a leopard (tortoise I mean. the cats are way different). Some folks seem to be curious, as to the how's and why's, hence this thread.
My experience has been primarily with Redfoot tortoises in California, an engaging but maddening species that both requires humidity to avoid pyramiding but also gets shell rot. In at least one situation that I am particularly proud of, I was able to accomplish both conditions simultaneously.
While wrapping my head around that little gem, I was also playing around with both temperature and light with an eye to providing an environmental gradient. So, not four temperatures but 40 (note: this number was arbitrarily chosen to make a point and is not meant to be taken literally). A similar approach was taken with lighting. My qualitative, purely subjective observation was that when provided such a range of conditions, activity levels were higher and more closely resembled behaviors outdoors. I took this to be a good thing and applied the same concept to humidity.
Thus, a humid hid full of sphagnum moss, buried under coco coir with plants growing. Humidity reads 99% till the gauge dies. On top, among the plants it's about 80%. Proceeding up the heat and light gradient, the RH drops to about 50%. This, with twice daily soaks has so far yielded this:

I'm happy so far. The same basic approach has produced this guy
Not bad and no shell rot, but he doesn't look wild and that would the goal.
Anyway, that's where I'm coming from. To add more would jeopardize my hard won lurker status.
My experience has been primarily with Redfoot tortoises in California, an engaging but maddening species that both requires humidity to avoid pyramiding but also gets shell rot. In at least one situation that I am particularly proud of, I was able to accomplish both conditions simultaneously.
While wrapping my head around that little gem, I was also playing around with both temperature and light with an eye to providing an environmental gradient. So, not four temperatures but 40 (note: this number was arbitrarily chosen to make a point and is not meant to be taken literally). A similar approach was taken with lighting. My qualitative, purely subjective observation was that when provided such a range of conditions, activity levels were higher and more closely resembled behaviors outdoors. I took this to be a good thing and applied the same concept to humidity.
Thus, a humid hid full of sphagnum moss, buried under coco coir with plants growing. Humidity reads 99% till the gauge dies. On top, among the plants it's about 80%. Proceeding up the heat and light gradient, the RH drops to about 50%. This, with twice daily soaks has so far yielded this:

I'm happy so far. The same basic approach has produced this guy

Not bad and no shell rot, but he doesn't look wild and that would the goal.
Anyway, that's where I'm coming from. To add more would jeopardize my hard won lurker status.