Quote:
Originally Posted by smoothie4l
I took your advise with the plexiglass under the towel and it's helped the humidity a lot~!
The whiteboard is actually my wishlist :P I only have the two pythons
I used to wright it down when they shed but I don't anymore.. I know they tend to shed within a week of each other and I think it was around the end of summer...
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So about 3 months since last shed?
Seems like that matches timing for outside temps going down, furnaces coming on and overall RH nose diving.
In the fall we went from warm to frozen before I had my the vaporizer set up in the snake room (and right before a feeding) and subsequently everything dried out and I had lots of animals refuse that week.
There is even a chance that your 2 snakes might have stuck shed. If you can ensure RH is up, and stable, you might get a shed and then the feeding animals you seek.
The greater issue with stuck shed is that it will stress the animal out which I know you don't want.
Consider getting something like this for the snake room:
EZI Digital LCD Humidity Hygrometer Temperature Thermometer Indoor Outdoor US | eBay
You get a temp reading at the unit.
You get a temp reading at a probe.
You get a reading or RH% in the snake room.
Two or three days in the last month my house dipped just under 30%. (I like my house warm). If your snake room has had roller coaster RH and sharp drops the snakes are going to feel it and you might not know until afterwards. Know where your room is, stabilize it, then you can stabilize the enclosures.
.....and...get more snakes....part of the answer is almost always...more snakes!