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IndigoSean Aug 11, 2011 07:30 AM

What temp would y'all reccomend for a easterns hot spot. I know room air should be in the low 70's but not sure about the hot spot. My snake room temps in the summer range from 70-80 during a 24 hour period. Do I even need a hot spot? I want to era on the side of caution. I know high temps will kill them.

Replies (3)

steve fuller Aug 11, 2011 11:06 AM

I don't believe hot spot is needed. My indigo cages are stacked and most have a warmer area in back because of heat from light in cage below. Males are in bottom cages which are a little cooler now. By October they are much cooler than cages above.

VICtort Aug 11, 2011 11:48 AM

Different things seem to work for folks, maybe because of varying cage designs and ambient temperatures. Where I live in the very mild or torrid heat of the So. Cal desert, my indigos only rarely utilize the basking heat provided in winter, a spot light that is in the high 80's about 6 hours a day. Ambient temps here are warm, rarely dropping into the high 50's. I suggest a spot light allowing them to warm up if needed, but mine at least only rarely use it. It could be important at times, such as a large food bolus, gravid condition, ovulation, healing, etc. Most agree providing a range of temps and choices is highly desirable. good luck, Vic

herbivorous Aug 11, 2011 11:24 PM

Sean-

I have basking spots for all of my adult indigos and cribos. During the summer when it is relatively warm, I use a really weak element or just replace the regular light bulbs with CFLs. Most of my adults will come out and bask in the morning and then retire as the garage warms up. During the summer, the area where I keep my snakes gets up to 78-80 degrees at the high. During the cooler months, I use a regular 75 watt heat bulb as a basking light combined with a heat pad underneath the cage. The area right over the basking spot will reach around 100 degrees (surface temperature measured with one of those point and shoot thermometers) while the ambient temperature stays in the 70s during the day. I have both the light and the heat pad on a timer that goes on for a certain number of hours a day even during the winter.

I don't really know that they absolutely need the supplemental heat unless they are gravid or digesting, but they really do seem to respond to light cycles in my experience. During the "day" time when the lights are on they have strong appetites, but some of my snakes are genuinely pestered by food or handling if I bother them after the lights go out and it is "night" in their cages. I do think they are more active when they have a basking light (CFL or not) than if they don't have a basking light.

Hope that helps.
Ubiquitous Serpent

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