WhereToBegin
New member
Hey guys,
I'm thinking of going bioactive for my new 40 gallon terrariums. I've purchased some REALLY clean forest dirt(the kid at home depot was probably ready to cry by the time we finished sifting through options), play sand, and excavator clay to mix. I was wondering what mixes people have had success with in bioactive enclosures? Should I add anything else? I was thinking some ash or volcanic rock or pumice could be good for fertilizing the soil. Is there anything else I should know?
For CUC I would like to use Dubia's, Mealies, Morios, isopods, and springtails. I was also playing with the idea of using blue death feigning beetles or even possibly dung beetles? I worry about the gecko's eating them though... :scratchhead:
I was thinking about layering the dirt to provide a softer and more airy dirt towards the bottom, with a more compact clay surface(with "holes" down to the lower layers for the CUC). I was thinking of using a mix of 6/8th excavator and 2/8th soil/sand mix for the top layer(which would only be about 1/2-1/4" thick), with a layer that is more half/half inbetween and a more soil layer at the bottom. The top two layers likely won't be very thick layers, and I was thinking the bottom layer would be the thickest. I mentioned this idea to a petstore employee who keeps their gecko in a bioactive, and they mentioned something about moisture build-up possibly cracking the terrarium? I may have misunderstood, but I think they thought I was planning on using a heat mat(I've decided on using ceramic heat emitters for all of the enclosures) so would it be the heat and the moisture? Should I include a drainage layer in this sort of set up to catch extra moisture and reduce any toxicity building up in the bottom layers? Or just toss the idea of layers all together? Any idea's or advice would be great!
I'm thinking of going bioactive for my new 40 gallon terrariums. I've purchased some REALLY clean forest dirt(the kid at home depot was probably ready to cry by the time we finished sifting through options), play sand, and excavator clay to mix. I was wondering what mixes people have had success with in bioactive enclosures? Should I add anything else? I was thinking some ash or volcanic rock or pumice could be good for fertilizing the soil. Is there anything else I should know?
For CUC I would like to use Dubia's, Mealies, Morios, isopods, and springtails. I was also playing with the idea of using blue death feigning beetles or even possibly dung beetles? I worry about the gecko's eating them though... :scratchhead:
I was thinking about layering the dirt to provide a softer and more airy dirt towards the bottom, with a more compact clay surface(with "holes" down to the lower layers for the CUC). I was thinking of using a mix of 6/8th excavator and 2/8th soil/sand mix for the top layer(which would only be about 1/2-1/4" thick), with a layer that is more half/half inbetween and a more soil layer at the bottom. The top two layers likely won't be very thick layers, and I was thinking the bottom layer would be the thickest. I mentioned this idea to a petstore employee who keeps their gecko in a bioactive, and they mentioned something about moisture build-up possibly cracking the terrarium? I may have misunderstood, but I think they thought I was planning on using a heat mat(I've decided on using ceramic heat emitters for all of the enclosures) so would it be the heat and the moisture? Should I include a drainage layer in this sort of set up to catch extra moisture and reduce any toxicity building up in the bottom layers? Or just toss the idea of layers all together? Any idea's or advice would be great!