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Old 07-21-17, 03:08 PM   #1
dannybgoode
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Re: Keeping snakes without a hotspot

Recommending an unsafe piece of equipment when there are plenty of safe alternatives is completely different to what is being discussed here.
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Old 07-21-17, 03:18 PM   #2
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Re: Keeping snakes without a hotspot

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Originally Posted by dannybgoode View Post
Recommending an unsafe piece of equipment when there are plenty of safe alternatives is completely different to what is being discussed here.
Well....unfortunately, we are on different sides of the street, ....and I throw down the gauntlet!!!!

But....I wanna see ANY EVIDENCE a heat rock has injured anything but a British woman in the last 10 years!

Ummmm.....I don't ever wanna see a reptile injured.... ( unless it lives in the UK!!!! ( Love ya bud, ya know I'm kidding!)
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Old 07-21-17, 04:16 PM   #3
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Re: Keeping snakes without a hotspot

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Well....unfortunately, we are on different sides of the street, ....and I throw down the gauntlet!!!!

But....I wanna see ANY EVIDENCE a heat rock has injured anything but a British woman in the last 10 years!

Ummmm.....I don't ever wanna see a reptile injured.... ( unless it lives in the UK!!!! ( Love ya bud, ya know I'm kidding!)
I think the heat rock discussion at least potentially has validity to be reopened. Back in the day they were dangerous. We all saw pictures and hear horror stories.

Could the quality control and designs, safety measures have improved in the 25 or so years since they first became popular? I think its possible, they still sell the dang things even though seemingly every reptile community on the planet strongly recommends against them. Could they have been improved to the point that a failure or burn is as rare as it is with heat pads?

That said, even if they are as safe as a heat pad is. They affect the ambient temps less than a wide spread heat pad, look ugly most of the time and in my opinion the optimal product would still be the heat pad even ignoring the safety concerns of a heat rock.
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Old 07-21-17, 05:29 PM   #4
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Re: Keeping snakes without a hotspot

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I think the heat rock discussion at least potentially has validity to be reopened. Back in the day they were dangerous. We all saw pictures and hear horror stories.

Could the quality control and designs, safety measures have improved in the 25 or so years since they first became popular? I think its possible, they still sell the dang things even though seemingly every reptile community on the planet strongly recommends against them. Could they have been improved to the point that a failure or burn is as rare as it is with heat pads?

That said, even if they are as safe as a heat pad is. They affect the ambient temps less than a wide spread heat pad, look ugly most of the time and in my opinion the optimal product would still be the heat pad even ignoring the safety concerns of a heat rock.
Even with more stringent quality controls and safety their very design encourages a reptile to sit on or wrap round them which increases the chance of thermal blocking.

Anyway, I'm reluctant to comment further on this thread as it's been a really interesting debate and I don't want to pollute it and take too far off topic. With this in mind Doug perhaps start at new thread specifically on heat rocks and we can discuss there.
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Old 07-24-17, 12:39 AM   #5
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Re: Keeping snakes without a hotspot

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Originally Posted by dannybgoode View Post
Even with more stringent quality controls and safety their very design encourages a reptile to sit on or wrap round them which increases the chance of thermal blocking.

Anyway, I'm reluctant to comment further on this thread as it's been a really interesting debate and I don't want to pollute it and take too far off topic. With this in mind Doug perhaps start at new thread specifically on heat rocks and we can discuss there.
Posted my new setup in the colubrid forum Danny!
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Old 07-21-17, 06:30 PM   #6
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Re: Keeping snakes without a hotspot

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Originally Posted by jjhill001 View Post
I think the heat rock discussion at least potentially has validity to be reopened. Back in the day they were dangerous. We all saw pictures and hear horror stories.

Could the quality control and designs, safety measures have improved in the 25 or so years since they first became popular? I think its possible, they still sell the dang things even though seemingly every reptile community on the planet strongly recommends against them. Could they have been improved to the point that a failure or burn is as rare as it is with heat pads?

That said, even if they are as safe as a heat pad is. They affect the ambient temps less than a wide spread heat pad, look ugly most of the time and in my opinion the optimal product would still be the heat pad even ignoring the safety concerns of a heat rock.
I don't see the need...AGAIN!!!! Just need one fatality... .( AIN'T HAPPENING!!!!!) HEAT rocks are SAFE now... DEAL WITH IT!!!!
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Old 07-21-17, 07:21 PM   #7
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Re: Keeping snakes without a hotspot

I have seen a heat rock severely burn (cook) a boas tail. I like heat rocks, cut off the cord and they make nice decorations.
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Old 07-21-17, 07:28 PM   #8
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Re: Keeping snakes without a hotspot

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I have seen a heat rock severely burn (cook) a boas tail. I like heat rocks, cut off the cord and they make nice decorations.
LOL! I have one....it's about as hot as a lap dog... and no problems in years and years.

NOW....my point is...YES!!! They used to be crap....but!!!!! Before we even have a RIDICULOUS conversation on something that DOESN'T EXSIST...( heat rock danger)... We should start with something substantial, not outdated OPINIONS!

BTW: I don't see the need for a separate thread, (I thought this was about HEAT SOURCES!)

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Old 07-21-17, 09:19 PM   #9
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Re: Keeping snakes without a hotspot

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LOL! I have one....it's about as hot as a lap dog... and no problems in years and years.

NOW....my point is...YES!!! They used to be crap....but!!!!! Before we even have a RIDICULOUS conversation on something that DOESN'T EXSIST...( heat rock danger)... We should start with something substantial, not outdated OPINIONS!

BTW: I don't see the need for a separate thread, (I thought this was about HEAT SOURCES!)
https://www.google.com/search?q=heat...burns+reptiles

It's many more than just one animal affected. They were also much more prevalent years ago before people posted literally everything on the internet. And given the shame of killing your own animal after people on a community site told you not to use one, I doubt they come back to admit they were wrong.

In addition, I would say probably only 10% of the reptile community frequents forums and sites like this for any long time period. Probably less than 50% of reptile keepers ever even create an account. And another 50% just do whatever the pet store tells them to.

That 50% doing whatever a pet store tells them to do aren't likely to even know that communities like this even exist thus we're not likely to hear about it.
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Old 07-21-17, 09:39 PM   #10
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Re: Keeping snakes without a hotspot

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Originally Posted by jjhill001 View Post
https://www.google.com/search?q=heat...burns+reptiles

It's many more than just one animal affected. They were also much more prevalent years ago before people posted literally everything on the internet. And given the shame of killing your own animal after people on a community site told you not to use one, I doubt they come back to admit they were wrong.

In addition, I would say probably only 10% of the reptile community frequents forums and sites like this for any long time period. Probably less than 50% of reptile keepers ever even create an account. And another 50% just do whatever the pet store tells them to.

That 50% doing whatever a pet store tells them to do aren't likely to even know that communities like this even exist thus we're not likely to hear about it.
I'm sorry, I have to disagree. First off, most members on ANY pet forums....are likely to be overly protective and unrealistic in NECESSARY accommodation.

I take the position that most pet owners are OVERPROCTECTIVE... and not very likely to be swayed or swindled by pet store employees. Does it happen??? Of course...but...usually those dolts don't show up on pet forums.
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Old 07-21-17, 10:22 PM   #11
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Re: Keeping snakes without a hotspot

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I'm sorry, I have to disagree. First off, most members on ANY pet forums....are likely to be overly protective and unrealistic in NECESSARY accommodation.

I take the position that most pet owners are OVERPROCTECTIVE... and not very likely to be swayed or swindled by pet store employees. Does it happen??? Of course...but...usually those dolts don't show up on pet forums.
I beg to disagree. We see it on the forums quite frequently, someone shows their setup or asks a question and when asked why they are doing something a certain way one of the more common reason's given is "that's what the employee told me".

Many keeper's first herp was from an impulse purchase. Or just asking mom and she just goes and gets the stuff that the employee gives her etc. My first herp EVER was a leopard frog I raised from a tadpole I caught at a friend's house. I had literally never read a book about animal care in my life. I kinda just winged it based on what I knew about frogs, the first summer I fed it by literally going outside and catching 10-20 black crickets, worms and such every other day or so. It wasn't until winter that I had to figure out what the heck I was gonna feed him, that led me to the internet in all of it's dial up glory and random colored text common of 90's webpages.

I had literally never been in a pet store that sold reptiles before. All our fish in my mom's aquarium were from Walmart (The 90's were a wild wasteland of change and confusion for everyone involved).

Anyways then I got a library card and the rest is history for me.

The main point is, people get the animal, having little knowledge. They DO care about their pet and are protective of it. But I feel it is much more common for that to come AFTER they get their animal. Not before. And if nothing bad happens, they don't have to venture to the internet for anything unless they REALLY catch the bug or find a book or something that expands on what they know about the reptile community. They often only venture here if something goes wrong.

I'm talking the FIRST reptile pet someone gets is going to be a beginner and will have a good chance of being misled by a pet store employee. Sometimes that person has done a lot of research but more likely they didn't.
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Old 07-21-17, 11:06 PM   #12
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Re: Keeping snakes without a hotspot

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LOL! I have one....it's about as hot as a lap dog... and no problems in years and years.

NOW....my point is...YES!!! They used to be crap....but!!!!! Before we even have a RIDICULOUS conversation on something that DOESN'T EXSIST...( heat rock danger)... We should start with something substantial, not outdated OPINIONS!

BTW: I don't see the need for a separate thread, (I thought this was about HEAT SOURCES!)
No this thread is about whether and how to keep reptiles with a basking spot not what the source of a basking spot is it one is provided. Until you mentioned heat rocks no one had discussed heat sources so yes I think this is a separate discussion.

No need to divert the discussion away from what was being discussed here which as I say was about the merits of basking spots or not.

I know from many of your other replies you like to be deliberately antagonistic but please don't ruin threads that have been so interesting. Start your own thread and troll on that all you want.
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Old 07-22-17, 01:01 AM   #13
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Re: Keeping snakes without a hotspot

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No this thread is about whether and how to keep reptiles with a basking spot not what the source of a basking spot is it one is provided. Until you mentioned heat rocks no one had discussed heat sources so yes I think this is a separate discussion.

No need to divert the discussion away from what was being discussed here which as I say was about the merits of basking spots or not.

I know from many of your other replies you like to be deliberately antagonistic but please don't ruin threads that have been so interesting. Start your own thread and troll on that all you want.
I think the heat source is at least relevant. Considering the entire discussion is heat based. I however don't understand Doug's overaggressive and dismissive method of conveying his information.
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Old 07-22-17, 01:09 AM   #14
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Re: Keeping snakes without a hotspot

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I think the heat source is at least relevant. Considering the entire discussion is heat based. I however don't understand Doug's overaggressive and dismissive method of conveying his information.
Perhaps but then we are into the realms of the merits of the various heat sources (radiant, mats, visible light and non visible light bulbs etc) which is a topic in itself. More than happy to diverge into these areas if that's the consensus.
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Old 07-22-17, 02:57 AM   #15
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Re: Keeping snakes without a hotspot

You miss one interesting benefit of lightbulbs. They output more IR-A than a che which outputs almost exclusively IR-C.

Studies show IR-A penetrates deeper into muscle so is more effective at warming reptiles - particularly important for dinural species who like to get up and on it in the day.

Using my method of heating (ambient room to 22c ish) I can use lightbulbs during the day and then off at night although for my snakes I'm currently using Che's. I may swap to bulbs though over time for the reason.

I have a deep hatred of heat mats and they would be ineffective in my vivs anyway give the depth of substrate.

Heat rocks regardless of modernity are not something I'd use. All the disadvantages of mats (little use in raising ambient temperature etc) with the added dangers already discussed.
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