Posted by:
Medic8388
at Thu Jun 23 07:41:30 2011 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by Medic8388 ]
Thank you for the reply. Funny thing about cages at my place is they don't stay vacant very long(anyone else have that problem?), so when the monitor out grows it it will taken apart, sanitized, and re-purposed I'm sure. The major costs for this particular cage are the cage itself, the lights, and the water setup. Looking back the rest was actually quite minimal compared to what I've spent on some of the others.
I'm actually kinda eager for him to out grow that cage. I have something planned for him that centers on a large indoor pond(think about what you might see walking into a Japanese Steakhouse but setup for a monitor). I want to make sure I have "monitor basics" down before I have to undertake that endeavor though.
I don't really think you get a good view of my room in the videos, but I'm moving in two weeks and my new room will be a lot larger and have a walk-in closet. My current arrangement of tanks makes taking care of everything pretty easy. People seem to think it must take a lot of time caring for all of the animals I have but with my system its actually quite simple. I spend about 30 minutes each morning feeding and changing water and about 30 minutes each evening spot cleaning. Once per week one large cage and one small cage is broken down and thoroughly cleaned. ...and I have no idea why this last paragraph is even here, lol. ----- Green Igg 1.1.0
Beardie 1.0.0
Green Tree Frogs 0.0.2
Green Anole 1.0.0
Leopard Gecko 0.1.0
American Toad 0.0.1
Ball Python 0.0.1
Nile Monitor 0.0.1
Yellow Belly Slider 0.0.1
Tokay Gecko 0.0.1
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