Leopard Gecko supplies

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Hi, I'm new here. But I've had my leopard gecko for a couple of years now. He does fine with room temperature (I also live on the top floor of an appartment building that stays around 76-80 degrees. I also used to live in Florida so my old house used to stay at the same temps). You can also use exo-terra's night glo bulbs (moonlight) that produce a blueish hugh. But being ground dwelling it would be best to use an under the tank heat pad, but you need to make sure you have enough space between the pad and the top of the substrate because it might burn the leo. Also do not use a heat rock due to possible burns. I use washed play sand as a substrate. Do not use calci-sand due to possible impaction. And do not use any kind of sand for jueviniles. Be careful with the carpet like material because if they fray around the edges at all the leo could try to eat it. Put in a nice humid hide (they are very reclusive). Also leave a little bit of calcium in the tank for them to lick. And dust the food twice a week.

Right now I have mine in a 29 tall tank with no lid on it. I feed him superworms since they aren't annoying like crickets and can't jump out, and imo they are also better then meal worms since the gecko cannot swallow them whole and has to chew it thus killing the worm. You don't have to worry about cutting the mouths off the worms that way too. In the future I plan of feeding roaches since they overall sound like a better choice IMO. For my hide I drilled a few 1.5" holes through a log forming a large chamber in the middle.I also sanded it down, bleach bathed it, and washed it.


 
I'd never recommend reptile-carpet for any harp. Its abrasive, it can fray and soaks up the urea from the poop and creates a breeding ground for bacteria. I’d go with ceramic tiles.
 
I'm going to use paper towels.
Making a humid hide out of a meal-worm container and some tissue paper.
I have two little boxes to use as regular hides.

Once the gecko is larger I'm going to set-up a colony of dubia roaches because they dont smell like crickets and cant climb vertical surfaces.
 
Well.
I ended up getting one piece of repti-carpet.
I'm just trying it out, I'll use paper towels once the repti-carpet gets dirty.

Have the gecko now.
I picked the largest out of the group, got him home and within 3 minutes into his enclosure he ate 2 dusted crickets and ate another a few minutes later. I watched him drink water on the way home as I put a little in a bottle cap for him.
In the enclosure I'm using a bottle cap from a powerade bottle that I rinsed out very well for his water dish. I bought a pretty big stone water dish but I'm afraid to use it because I dont want him to drown in it as the walls are high.

I dont have the calcium powder for the gecko to lick up, only flukers cricket dust as my LPS didn't have it which I thought was weird.
But I'll get some tomorrow.

I have three hides, one on the cool side, one on the hot side and one in the middle. I need to find a plastic container to make the humid hide out of but that wont be hard.
 
AttackFish;3138623; said:
Well.
I ended up getting one piece of repti-carpet.
I'm just trying it out, I'll use paper towels once the repti-carpet gets dirty.

Have the gecko now.
I picked the largest out of the group, got him home and within 3 minutes into his enclosure he ate 2 dusted crickets and ate another a few minutes later. I watched him drink water on the way home as I put a little in a bottle cap for him.
In the enclosure I'm using a bottle cap from a powerade bottle that I rinsed out very well for his water dish. I bought a pretty big stone water dish but I'm afraid to use it because I dont want him to drown in it as the walls are high.

I dont have the calcium powder for the gecko to lick up, only flukers cricket dust as my LPS didn't have it which I thought was weird.
But I'll get some tomorrow.

I have three hides, one on the cool side, one on the hot side and one in the middle. I need to find a plastic container to make the humid hide out of but that wont be hard.
Lol the gecko must be really small if you're worried about it drowning, and the only problem i can see with the bottle cap is the gecko stepping on it and tipping it over like several times a day lol, well its not an actual problem but really annoying ;) And to contribute to the heating question asked earlier, i use a UTH right under the hotside cave, which gets it to about 87-88F, (I have a probe thermometer which i suggest you get), but i also use a 50 watt infrared bulb on top of that which gets the hot hide to about 95+, and then on top of that they can bask outside of it. With the infrared bulb, the cool and humid hide are both around 76F, but imo if you leave the UTH all the time (which is what i do), it leaves the hot hide at a reasonably good temperature, but also lets the cool hide drop pretty low so that they have the choice for themsleves.

PS: Im using a 20 long, so maybe a 50 watt is too much for a 15.
 
evilxyardxgnome;3139622; said:
I used to use pop bottle caps for the calci dust and they would always spill it and get it on their feet and leave foot prints all over the tank.

Quick question about the calci, I have flukers calcium dust that I've been dusting the crickets with, is this the same kind I put into the dish for the leo to lick up or do I use another kind?
 
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