niblips
New member
:flames:
My girlfriend and I have recently become the proud owners of a Corn Snake. Zea Mays, hatched Apr 21/04
She is kept in a 20gal viv with 2 inches of Aspen chips. UTH on one side and basking lamp (40watt bulb) kept on same side with driftwood perch about 3 inches below the lamp. She has a hide in the corner of the viv with the UTH and Lamp at substrate level and a large piece of cork bark at cool side of viv. Also keep water bowl on cool side of viv
Initial temps with this set up are:
- 102+ degrees at floor directly above UTH.
- 95-98 degrees at substrate level directly above UTH
- 98 degrees at perch level directly below lamp
- 85 degrees at substrate level (measured with side mounted thermometer on warm side of viv)
- 87-91 degrees inside hide at warm side of viv
- 72 degrees under cork bark (where she spent most of her time during the day)
- 70-72 room temp in bsmt apt (Toronto, Ontario)
She was kept at these temps for about 2 weeks before I stumbled onto this site. She was active in the evening, would spend time on the perch under the lamp when digesting. She spent most of her time under the cork bark on the cool side of the viv (unless she was looking for an escape route out the bottom of the tank)
After coming across this site and reading a lot of posts on viv temps I started to get worried that she was to hot so I bought a rheostat to bring the temp a substrate level above the UTH to 85-87 degrees, and it has been this way for about a week now. However, I haven't seen Zea active since then. And she has been sleeping under the substrate close to the UTH.
Now I'm wondering if I needed the rheostat in the first place.($23.00 Canadian)
please comment as I'm not sure what to do now.........
Are the initial temps really too high as all other posts I have read state?
Is it dangerous to have these initial temps and what are the consequences?
My girlfriend and I have recently become the proud owners of a Corn Snake. Zea Mays, hatched Apr 21/04
She is kept in a 20gal viv with 2 inches of Aspen chips. UTH on one side and basking lamp (40watt bulb) kept on same side with driftwood perch about 3 inches below the lamp. She has a hide in the corner of the viv with the UTH and Lamp at substrate level and a large piece of cork bark at cool side of viv. Also keep water bowl on cool side of viv
Initial temps with this set up are:
- 102+ degrees at floor directly above UTH.
- 95-98 degrees at substrate level directly above UTH
- 98 degrees at perch level directly below lamp
- 85 degrees at substrate level (measured with side mounted thermometer on warm side of viv)
- 87-91 degrees inside hide at warm side of viv
- 72 degrees under cork bark (where she spent most of her time during the day)
- 70-72 room temp in bsmt apt (Toronto, Ontario)
She was kept at these temps for about 2 weeks before I stumbled onto this site. She was active in the evening, would spend time on the perch under the lamp when digesting. She spent most of her time under the cork bark on the cool side of the viv (unless she was looking for an escape route out the bottom of the tank)
After coming across this site and reading a lot of posts on viv temps I started to get worried that she was to hot so I bought a rheostat to bring the temp a substrate level above the UTH to 85-87 degrees, and it has been this way for about a week now. However, I haven't seen Zea active since then. And she has been sleeping under the substrate close to the UTH.
Now I'm wondering if I needed the rheostat in the first place.($23.00 Canadian)
please comment as I'm not sure what to do now.........
Are the initial temps really too high as all other posts I have read state?
Is it dangerous to have these initial temps and what are the consequences?