Okay don't rip my head off just yet... I know 100 degrees is way to hot for a corn...
If I have my heating pad's thermostat set a little below max it gets up to 100 degrees on the hottest part of the tank BELOW THE SUBSTRATE. My question is (by the way there is no snake in this enclosure yet... still doing temp. tests): If the substrate is about 85 on the hot side, and as low as 67 on the cool side, the hides are (first hide) mid to high 60s and (second hide) mid to high 70s, and the arboreal section is around 75 isn't that perfect? Only problem is for that to happen the glass itself, again NOT THE SUBSTRATE, in the hottest spot of the heatpad gets up to 100 degrees. Is this too hot? Will the snake just thermo-regulate? Can 100 degrees burn a corn? It seems to me like this would be fine. It seems that if the temps are right the corn should have no reason to go burrowing in the substrate.
Thanks for the input, hoping to put him in tonight or tomorrow.
If I have my heating pad's thermostat set a little below max it gets up to 100 degrees on the hottest part of the tank BELOW THE SUBSTRATE. My question is (by the way there is no snake in this enclosure yet... still doing temp. tests): If the substrate is about 85 on the hot side, and as low as 67 on the cool side, the hides are (first hide) mid to high 60s and (second hide) mid to high 70s, and the arboreal section is around 75 isn't that perfect? Only problem is for that to happen the glass itself, again NOT THE SUBSTRATE, in the hottest spot of the heatpad gets up to 100 degrees. Is this too hot? Will the snake just thermo-regulate? Can 100 degrees burn a corn? It seems to me like this would be fine. It seems that if the temps are right the corn should have no reason to go burrowing in the substrate.
Thanks for the input, hoping to put him in tonight or tomorrow.