Bonobo
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DirtI have a question !! Is anyone familiar with the use of sterilized earth with burrowing Ts? The kind im curious about , is the kind that is being used in planted aquaria by people wanting to establish a tank where the plants are a main focus , as its much more effective bioactively and just plain better then gravel . The soil used has no added Anything its just good dirt (even ' organic 'has chicken manure) which means its an unenhanced alloy of peat , sand, clays - regular earth soil . The thing i wonder is that mechanically it probably holds a burrow better then plain peat or coco fiber both media which i like but notice its flimsy . Soil is finer but heavier and i wonder if it would be good for a tiny burrowing sling ? What do you guys think about it?
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daveemory
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Re: Dirt | Bonobo wrote: | | I have a question !! Is anyone familiar with the use of sterilized earth with burrowing Ts? The kind im curious about , is the kind that is being used in planted aquaria by people wanting to establish a tank where the plants are a main focus , as its much more effective bioactively and just plain better then gravel . The soil used has no added Anything its just good dirt (even ' organic 'has chicken manure) which means its an unenhanced alloy of peat , sand, clays - regular earth soil . The thing i wonder is that mechanically it probably holds a burrow better then plain peat or coco fiber both media which i like but notice its flimsy . Soil is finer but heavier and i wonder if it would be good for a tiny burrowing sling ? What do you guys think about it? |
If you keep coco fiber moist, it should stay burrow-able. But absolutely, dry peet moss won't hold a burrow well. So the fellows at EBV suggested mixing peet moss with (organic) orchid mix, which I did, and all my tarantulas seem to like it just fine. I still use coco fiber for the "moist" tank species.
You never want to use gravel - it can injure the spider's underside and abdomen.
PC
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Bonobo
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Oh no i would never use gravel for any animal - i remember way back when gravel was used for practically Everything that didnt bark . Like how much of the worlds exotic fauna live in Gravel Pits? Maybe on another planet tho , huh? Aquaria seems to be the last hold out .
As for the soil , if coco fiber is what everyone prefers that is what i will use too . At places i worked in the past the terrestrials we had were smithi , rosea and seemanni it was before i got T addicted . i remember the smithi were adorable the roseys pretty and the seemanni always getting out all the time . They only had peat and a shelter hide . No digging fun. So i will be posting alot of ponderings and questions about the new T im going to get
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cacoseraph
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i think gravel might be a fall danger... but i never bought into the abrasion danger. i have found tarantulas and other mygs in soils that have crazy sharp rocks in it.. and they were doing just fine
pure fine coco fiber loses the ability to hold a burrow in like... a year or so. adding some larger strangely shaped pieces to a smaller mixture really seems to extend the burrow life, though
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Bonobo
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Hmm . . i think im getting it - my point of reference with Burrowing has been with herps , which for those guys truly dedicated to it ive had to fortify the hole with cork cylanders , clay pipe even wooden boxes for larger sp , because the media cant stand up . But Ts are light and their construction , and movement much more ginger i dont know if im explaining it clearly but i think i get it
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Bonobo
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oh man i just thought of something besides being Unnecessary soil would be way more alkaline then the coco and peat and mold loves that condition . The spider i want likes slightly damp too im not into trying anything new i dont have enough experiance but i had to ask . Thank you all for replying and treating my sophomoric exuberance so (always) kindly .
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