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- Newsgroups: rec.pets.herp
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sdd.hp.com!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!news.iastate.edu!pholland
- From: pholland@iastate.edu (Paul J Hollander)
- Subject: Re: Cage flooring
- Message-ID: <BzznxG.6qn@news.iastate.edu>
- Sender: news@news.iastate.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Iowa State University, Ames, IA
- References: <20592@ucdavis.ucdavis.edu>
- Date: Mon, 28 Dec 1992 21:34:27 GMT
- Lines: 51
-
- In article <20592@ucdavis.ucdavis.edu> nathan@charles.ucdavis.edu (Nathan Rollins) writes:
- >
- > There's always been a lot of debate about what to use on the floor of
- >reptile cages; wood chips and sand and kitty-litter and corncobs all
- >seem to have the problem that the animal can ingest or inhale the particles
- >and thus injure itself.
-
- Yes. I once opened a dead California king (not mine) that had been kept on
- kitty litter. There was a chunk ~2 mm across in the top of the lung. Cause
- of death, IMHO.
-
- >Some people use newspaper, but others say that the
- >ink is harmful and besides the looks leave something to be desired.
-
- Just an hour or so ago I was looking at Frederick Frye's recent 2 volume work
- (_Diseases of Captive Reptiles_, or similar title). He was down on everything
- listed above, for just the reason Otter gave. He liked paper (newspaper
- or butcher's paper) and indoor/outdoor carpeting. As I recall, he said that
- printers ink had PCBs in them, but the PCBs had been discontinued. So
- newspaper is OK even if it isn't very aesthetic.
-
- I read somewhere, long ago, that it was the colored ink in newsprint that
- was not real good for reptiles. The black ink in newspapers never seemed
- to hurt my animals. My cages were cleaned out whenever the water bowl was
- spilled, so they never got very wet, though. I still won't use colored pages
- because most of them are so slick that they can't absorb much liquid.
-
- > I was wondering, how about using folded cloth for the bottom of cages?
- >Towels, for example. It would be warm, help disperse heat, absorbent, and
- >when the animal defecated or unrinaton on it, you could just pull it out and
- >wash it (the towel I mean) in the washing machine, like a cloth diaper.
- > This would probably be only good for snakes, as lizards would get their
- >claws caught in it and amphibians would get too dry. But with a little
- >looking around you might even be able to find cloth or towels that looked
- >fairly "natural"...
- > I'm trying it with my 4.5 foot Burmese... she seems to like it thus far.
- >
- > Otter not Nathan
-
- I'd be careful with cloth towels. I've seen at least one account of a python
- that ate a towel. It had gotten rabbit or guinea pig smell on it, so the
- snake thought it was food.
-
- Decent bath towels cost quite a bit. I've seen indoor/outdoor carpet (green)
- for around $3 per yard (length) off rolls 6 feet wide. This was in both a
- local farm supply store and a Des Moines lumber company.
-
- Paul Hollander pholland@iastate.edu
- Behold the tortoise: he makes no progress unless he sticks his neck out.
-
-
-