- Joined
- Dec 24, 2018
- Messages
- 1,172
You still yapping....ORIGINAL QUESTION:
I'm trying to redo my T's enclosures. I have a GBB and N. Chromatus. I plan to do a 70:30 topsoil: orchid moss mixture with a barrier separating from drainage (hydroballs or other).
My first question is does this mixture sounds good for both T's and second question is what's a cheap barrier that's safe for them? I need to be able to cut fit.
THE ANSWERS I GOT:
Does not answer my question. Laughs at mentioned hydroballs without any idea why I would want a drainage layer.
Again fails to answer my question in the first place. Laughing at the idea of a bioactive enclosure, although I was able to gather some more experience with the fact a drainage layer may be unnecessary so that's somewhat useful for me to keep researching why I might need or want one.
This goes on with a bunch of people chiming in on the fact that a bare bones container is all you need as long as you provide a hide basically and how anything else is essentially stupid. I provide a small research study with claims and it's appropriately questioned and scrutinized but following responses including yours indicate a predisposition of opinion versus emerging scientific fact.
@cold blood comes in with the same type of old-school mentality shooting down pretty much everything I've been stating. I provide a ton more research in the avenue of memory, learning, and how enclosure setups have a clear correlation to behavior.
And the guy you responded to is one of the few that actually had the guts to just provide actual relevant information with limited opinions that serve zero to my said original question other than the fact that maybe a drainage layer is worth looking into more.
I am a fan of keeping things simple, however, I have a specific vision for my setups. Likewise the topsoil mixture really shouldn't matter for the GBB so honestly do not know why I asked that question I suppose I was more curious about choosing orchid moss over the usual sphagnum because it wasn't available at my location at the time. However, I now do realize I may want to go for a more sand-like dry scrub setup with cacti if I want to go true to her environment. It's just that for some reason I thought that they, like the N. Chromatus, were found in both tropical and desert environments. She's currently in premolt so before I redo her enclosure I'm going to wait a while and do more research in the meantime.
I am going to see my vision through despite many of your opinions. I get that a lot of you have tons of T's and doing a bioactive would be crazy but I have TWO freaking T's man, I MIGHT get one more, maybe. So like I'll do the bioactive and make it as ludicrous at I want man... the least you guys could do is state your opinions/experience without people feel like you're gate keeping the hobby with should's and should nots. It not a handling debate, it was never even a debate at all... I mentioned hydroballs and the thread went bonkers.
