Yes. 100% fully aquaticPlease forgive me but, are these aquatic snakes?
Yes. 100% fully aquaticPlease forgive me but, are these aquatic snakes?
Thanks man. I'll give it a tryI bought this bag at Lowes and I think Home Depot would carry something similar.
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I may be wrong here as I have no experience with snakes, and don't care to, lol, but similar to how we do it with fish, wouldn't the OP be better off just getting the snakes used to the water he has work out better than messing around with the ph. Seems to me he is just asking for a ph crash by adding chemicals and what not to his water to try and achieve a certain ph.
These snakes have an extremely horrible track record here in captivity. They do not ship well and they do not adapt well. Nobody knows why yet bc majority die two weeks later from a disease we still know very little about that they call white spot fungus. I have kept mine alive for over two months now by mimicking their exact environment which includes keeping their water at a pH of 6.0. Trust me. Lots of people have tried acclimating theirs to a higher pH , including me in the past, and they start to develop the white spot and in this particular species, white spot is a death sentence. You guys do not understand how difficult this species really is to keep here in the US. In Asia, they seem to do extremely well in even the ****tiest conditions but every single one that shows up in Europe or Asia usually develop the white spot during shipping and die not long after. That's why I'm so diligent on keeping the pH at 6.0. Maybe one day, if I'm able to keep them happy and healthy for at least a year, I will SLOWLY, raise the pH and get them used to it.I agree with Fish Tank Travis, if the ph only goes back up to 7 and stays that way that's not too bad. I'm sure a stable ph is more important for all aquatic animals than going through the stress of ph swings.