mobile - desktop |
3 months for $50.00 |
News & Events:
|
|
[ Login ] [ User Prefs ]
[ Search Forums ] [ Back to Main Page ] [ Back to Sulcata & Spurred Tortoises ] [ Reply To This Message ] [ Register to Post ] |
Posted by: tglazie at Sat Apr 12 06:01:20 2008 [ Report Abuse ] [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by tglazie ] This depends on the soil condition, the shelter provisioned, and the sulcata in question. Not all sulcatas dig. Most do in the abasence of a shelter. Those that do but can't due to excessively rocky earth beneath clay soil, ofcourse, don't dig. Such is the situation here in South Texas. The ground is notable for it's thin layer of topsoil, over a thin layer of clay over a thick shelf of limestone. My sulcatas couldn't dig a burrow if they tried. Whenever I've had to plant a shrub, I generally needed a shovel, pickaxe, and iron rod to remove enough stone from the ground to provide a hole for a hibiscus/mulberry/althea plant to sit in. Depending on where you live, your tortoise will find burrowing to be of varying difficulty. Whether or not your animal proceeds from there is up to it. [ Reply To This Message ] [ Subscribe to this Thread ] [ Show Entire Thread ] | ||
>> Next Message: RE: Is digging a real problem? - meme_cantu, Sat Apr 12 13:24:50 2008 | ||
<< Previous Message: Is digging a real problem? - meme_cantu, Wed Apr 9 16:54:39 2008 |
AprilFirstBioEngineering | GunHobbyist.com | GunShowGuide.com | GunShows.mobi | GunBusinessGuide.com | club kingsnake | live stage magazine
|