elly_bananas wrote:Hermias_mom wrote:Elly, your moss pit looks great! So does your crabitat- much more decorative than mine -I like it
I have a reptile mesh lid, and the crabs are often walking across it, upside down. I think they'll love your coco mat on the side, and climbing your greenery, wood, and cholla!
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. If I were a crab, I would enjoy it! Mine regularly cross the habitat by crawling upside down along an oak branch smaller around than my finger. I think they like figuring things out and doing things that seem difficult to us.
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Thats interesting. You think i should leave it? Im going to cover the mesh lid to keep in the heat n humidity, tho im unclear what to use to do that atm. Thank you for your kind words and praise. I like it too.
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Yeah, I think you should leave the moss pit where it is. But you should totally do whatever you want to - it's your crabitat
If my crabs were in there, they would climb up the coco mesh on the wall, into the moss pit, have a snack, and then proceed to cross the reptile mesh lid (upside down) in several directions, probably looking for any space they can get out of the lid through. They might come down using the greenery or wood you've got in there that comes up pretty close to the top of the tank. As I said, I think they'd love it!
An interesting side note - I recently put that same white plastic bin that you're using as a moss pit in my crabitat (if I'm seeing the size correctly) as a shell shop. If you shave the ends of the plastic down, it will JUST fit across the width of a 10 gallon, with a few Command hooks to hold it up through the slats in the sides. I was seriously contemplating that for a while, and may still do it later, but I didn't want to block my UTH or my thermostat sensor, or put stuff right over both water dishes, so I ended up putting my shell shop caddy corner across my freshwater pool and touching the repti-hammock I'm using as a second level. I was looking for where I'd posted a pic, but I haven't apparently taken any of the new shell shop yet. I'll see if I can snap one when I get home.
If you're interested, the last three pics on this thread are of my current crabitat (minus the shell shop
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). I've got all sorts of ideas for what to do next in the 29 gallon with more room, but if you plan to stick with a 10 gallon for a while, it might give you a few ideas. Lots of great pics under the Pictures section of this forum too. (there are LOTS of great ideas out there!) I went a bit overboard with my coral purchases, and then I felt like, I've got to use it because I bought it, so I have a coral theme going on. Definitely going to do more greenery and wood in the next build - that's one thing I like about yours.
http://www.hermitcrabassociation.com/ph ... 8&t=113702
For covering up a reptile mesh lid, folks recommend plastic wrap or press-n-seal. Just put the reptile mesh lid in place, secure with lid clips (no escapees!), then cover most of it with your preferred plastic. I use press-n-seal to keep in the humidity, and change that out every month or so when it stops being sticky. You can leave part of the lid uncovered as needed to help regulate humidity if you need to. Some folks use glass or plastic cut to size as a second lid below their reptile mesh lids to keep the tat warmer, but I haven't done that myself, so I can't speak to that.
I'm a new crabber, so I'm not saying this is the best approach, but this is what I did to my lid and it seems to work so far - I started crabbing in the winter time and had a lot of issues with getting the crabitat hot enough first off. After the third rebuild I got a bit mad that it kept not working, so on my fourth build I went a bit overboard, but it's working, so... I covered 3/4 of my lid with Reflectix to insulate it(cleaned with rubbing alcohol first and allowed to dry, just in case there were contaminants on the Reflectix, but this was probably overkill), then put a 1/2" piece of styrofoam covered in Aluminum foil on top of the Reflectix, made little cutouts so I could get to my lid clips, and then covered it all with Press-n-seal (leaving a bit uncovered to regulate humidity). I also made a removable styrofoam piece covered in press-n-seal facing outwards so it would stick to the tank lid and be moveable so I could insulate the part of the lid that didn't have Reflectix on it. Yea, I think I went a bit nuts, but I was so TIRED of it not being hot enough for my crabs!
That's awesome that you don't have crabs in there to worry or stress about while you figure everything out.
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