Hi all,

As I mentoned earlier, I want to make the habitat for my worm snakes, which are coming tomorrow, as natural as possible. My dad lived in Pennsylvania for awhile as a child, and told me that all of the places he found worm snakes there were on steep slopes, where the soil that they burowed down went into a steep cliff. Do you think that maybe I could observe feeding, breeding, and other natural behaviors, if I arranged the substrate in this way, but still kept my moisture and heat graient?
How does a large, steep, sandy slope topped with moss sound? The snakes are Misouri locales, if that helps.
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DAVE

1.0 Western green toad
1.1 green treefrogs
1.0 Florida blue garter snake
1.1 Oriental fire-bellied toads
1.0 American bullfrog
0.1 Spanish ribbed newt
0.0.1 Eastern ribbon snake
1.1 red-cheeked mud turtles
0.1 Dubia day gecko
1.0 Sonoran gopher snake
0.1 rough green snakes
1.1 giant African black millipedes
1.0 Okeetee corn snake
0.1 Albino African clawed frog
1.0 Kenyan sand boa
0.0.1 Argentine flame-bellied toadlet
0.0.1 African bullfrog
1.0 yellow * Everglades rat snake intergrade
1.1 Western hognose snakes
1.2 fire salamanders
1.1 scarlet kingsnakes
0.0.1 Argentine horned frog
1.1 Southern ringneck snakes
0.0.2 Western hooknose snakes
0.0.1 Florida brown snake
0.1 Northern brown snake
COMING SOON: Western worm snakes, Midwestern worm snakes and West/ Midwest intergrades, more Brahminy blind snakes!