Climbing Objects & Humidity
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Climbing Objects & Humidity
Hey everyone
I am having trouble finding a piece of wood that wont mold in my crabitat. I have tried Zoo Med's Mopani Wood, and some other wood that claimed to be designed for hermit crabs, but they always started to mold. [smilie=banghead.gif] I dont usually look at the fake wood, because it doesnt seem like the crabs could climb it. Can any one recomend me to a piece of wood , or tell me about a decoration that they can easily climb that wont mold?
Also, I am having a tough time keeping the humidity up in my crabitat. The lid doesnt have any big holes, just one that i covered with plastic wrap. It is usually 60%, until I mist it then it will turn to 75 or 80%, but then it goes back down. I dont want to spend money on an expensive mister either... any help?
I am having trouble finding a piece of wood that wont mold in my crabitat. I have tried Zoo Med's Mopani Wood, and some other wood that claimed to be designed for hermit crabs, but they always started to mold. [smilie=banghead.gif] I dont usually look at the fake wood, because it doesnt seem like the crabs could climb it. Can any one recomend me to a piece of wood , or tell me about a decoration that they can easily climb that wont mold?
Also, I am having a tough time keeping the humidity up in my crabitat. The lid doesnt have any big holes, just one that i covered with plastic wrap. It is usually 60%, until I mist it then it will turn to 75 or 80%, but then it goes back down. I dont want to spend money on an expensive mister either... any help?
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I think I can help you.
Cholla wood is an easy-to-climb (and eat) wood for the crabs. Soak it in saltwater overnight and it really become mold-resistant. Make sure you continue to soak it overnight every month or so to keep it mold-resistant. I've never had any problems with my cholla wood. Fake plants are also pretty mold-resistant, and the crabs love to climb them. Hemp nets are naturally mold-resistant and crabs love those. Just make sure the net has no wax coating or such.
As for the humidity, you can try adding a bubbler pool. It's a system of air that blows bubbles into the water dish. The crabs love them. Also, you can add a moss pit (using Fluker's natural moss) to help boost humidity. Keep your substrate sand-castle consistency and continue misting. Moss pits aren't too expense, but I'm not sure about the pool.
Cholla wood is an easy-to-climb (and eat) wood for the crabs. Soak it in saltwater overnight and it really become mold-resistant. Make sure you continue to soak it overnight every month or so to keep it mold-resistant. I've never had any problems with my cholla wood. Fake plants are also pretty mold-resistant, and the crabs love to climb them. Hemp nets are naturally mold-resistant and crabs love those. Just make sure the net has no wax coating or such.
As for the humidity, you can try adding a bubbler pool. It's a system of air that blows bubbles into the water dish. The crabs love them. Also, you can add a moss pit (using Fluker's natural moss) to help boost humidity. Keep your substrate sand-castle consistency and continue misting. Moss pits aren't too expense, but I'm not sure about the pool.
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Topic author
No wood is mold-resistant, unfortunately, but there are other options. You can try boiling cholla wood in salt water every month and it will keep it mold resistant. Fake plants dont mold, resin decorations don't, fishnet (mine go crazy for this) is great, you could try cholla wood, mine doesn't mold quickly at all, but that's just mine.
For humidity, make sure the substrate is sand-castle consistency. You could also add a moss pit. Try Fluker's all-natural (not the dyed stuff) moss and put it in a 2nd level...the crabs love it. You can also try the moss you get at craft stores, but not Spanish moss. It also helps with humidity. You can also try making Bundy's DIY Humidifier. Look at the top of the DIY section...it's a sticky.
For humidity, make sure the substrate is sand-castle consistency. You could also add a moss pit. Try Fluker's all-natural (not the dyed stuff) moss and put it in a 2nd level...the crabs love it. You can also try the moss you get at craft stores, but not Spanish moss. It also helps with humidity. You can also try making Bundy's DIY Humidifier. Look at the top of the DIY section...it's a sticky.
Last edited by Guest on Wed Jul 25, 2007 1:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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I have a piece of resin driftwood in the tank and the crabs have no problem climbing it. It has little green patches of "moss" on it, and apparently to a crab it looks real, cause I saw one of my crabs trying to eat it the other day. He eventually gave up when he realized there wasn't anything in his pincher. Silly crabby :roll:
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Hey, thanks for the replies...
I had an aquarium bubbler, so I put that in the freshwater bowl and it raised the humidity 10%! I had known other ppl used the bubblers, but I dont like to use it cause it is kinda noisy but oh well.
About the climbing wood, I guess I will just look around the petstore next time and try to find something, and I will also look for some netting for them to climb.
Thank you!
I had an aquarium bubbler, so I put that in the freshwater bowl and it raised the humidity 10%! I had known other ppl used the bubblers, but I dont like to use it cause it is kinda noisy but oh well.
About the climbing wood, I guess I will just look around the petstore next time and try to find something, and I will also look for some netting for them to climb.
Thank you!
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- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 2:47 pm
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Not to contradict you, but the only time we've ever had mold on the cholla is when food + bedabeast caused mold popped up right next to it and it spread. Now we don't let the cholla rest in the cocofiber. But it does sit ( and gets slightly buried in, wet sand.dancinhermielover wrote:No wood is mold-resistant, unfortunately, but there are other options. You can try boiling cholla wood in salt water every month and it will keep it mold resistant. Fake plants dont mold, resin decorations don't, fishnet (mine go crazy for this) is great, you could try cholla wood, mine doesn't mold quickly at all, but that's just mine.
We don't do the salt water boil - so we've probably been lucky in that regard, but I think this supports the argument that it's very mold resistant.
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If you mist your tat, using salt water for misting will help keep mold levels down. Another thing you might think about is using fresh oak or maple branches and then tossing them when they do mold. Changing to new branches frequently will give them a new challenge to climb and also new leaves will give them a snack.