WillTortoise said:Russian eat weeds and vegetables; skip the pellets.
Add a temperature gun to your list.
Build your own tortoise table; better and larger and cheaper.
Do not use the compact fluorescent bulbs.
Get a digital recording thermometer with humidity reading also.
No to the heat rock; just have a piece of slate for him to eat from; keeps beak trimmed.
Water dish should be terra cotta saucer like used under planters. Shallow to prevent drowning.
One end of enclosure needs to be cool the other end needs heat and UV for basking.
Good luck.
kanalomele said:If possible your russian will be most happy with a large outdoor enclosure. All of my adult russians live outdoors year round. Hatchlings are inside. I use coir/topsoil mixed at 50:50 a MVB for UV and feed on slate. Additionally a WIDELY varied diet is important. I do not mean feed 3 or 4 different things. I mean feed 20-30 different things. Get the basics of this right and you will have a happy and healthy tortoise.
WillTortoise said:Russian eat weeds and vegetables; skip the pellets.
Add a temperature gun to your list.
Build your own tortoise table; better and larger and cheaper.
Do not use the compact fluorescent bulbs.
Get a digital recording thermometer with humidity reading also.
No to the heat rock; just have a piece of slate for him to eat from; keeps beak trimmed.
Water dish should be terra cotta saucer like used under planters. Shallow to prevent drowning.
One end of enclosure needs to be cool the other end needs heat and UV for basking.
Good luck.
WillTortoise said:Build a small house to serve as a hide and to install a CHE on a thermostat.
Keep in mind that Russians will hibernate during the winter if give a soil area that they can dig down into.
Most keeper do not hibernate them the first winter wanting to make sure they are healthy enough first. You could build a indoor table for the first winter.
Where are you located? How wet and cold do your winters get?
Remember Russians are great escape artists. They climb "tall buildings with a single bound" and dig thru miles of dirt just to see whats on the other side.
Good luck.
Tom said:Unless you live in a refrigerator, your Russian does not need night heat. I'd leave it dark.
What type of UV bulb did you get? The coil type can damage their eyes.
Where are you? In most of the continental US it does not get too cold at night for Russians in the summer time.