What happened to you and your Uromastyx, why don't you post anymore? You have the best designed enclosure setups I have seen. I have a few uromastyx also.
Very nice and well thought out enclosure. The rock walls on the side are some of the best I've seen. I assume you made them - how about a video on how they are constructed?
Urovers85 I have a trio of baby Moroccan uros, and for their adult enclosure I'd love to build something like this. I guess I'd just like to see how the enclosure is today, and see if you'd have done anything differently.
For a trio of nigriventris I'd suggest going larger than this (something like 8x3x3). I'd also suggest multiple basking areas and, if you were to do a burrow box, multiple chambers and entrances. This will help prevent conflict over the long haul (my experience with nigriventris is that they can be especially ruthless). As for what I'd do different: 1) keep live plants away from the wall--they tend to get climbed on more this way. The palms are great because they're already up off the floor, but the more access the more the plant will suffer. 2) make the entire burrow box out of coma/PVC board (which I've done already since). That's about it though...the rest seems to be tuned in to my liking.
Urovers85 wow, thanks for all the advice, I was actually planning on building it about 8x4x3, because those are the dimensions of my tegus cage, and I could just stack the cages, also do you mean having multiple burrow boxes, or having multiple entrances to the burrow box?
8x4x3 would be excellent! The larger the enclosure/more personal space the better, especially when it comes to breeding season (females can be extremely aggressive pre/post nesting). That said, plan on a ton of visual barriers to break up line-of-site of cagemates or, if possible, an optional divider to split the enclosure if required (trust me when I say temperament can change very, very quickly).
Absolutely fenominal
What happened to you and your Uromastyx, why don't you post anymore? You have the best designed enclosure setups I have seen. I have a few uromastyx also.
Any videos of your builds with step by step? Or even new videos?.
Great looking enclosure...very informative video. Thanks for posting.
Great job.
Very Nice Ideas ..
come back we need more videos
Very nice and well thought out enclosure. The rock walls on the side are some of the best I've seen. I assume you made them - how about a video on how they are constructed?
One of these days, Paul!
MAKE MORE VIDEOSSSSS!!!
I love your videos. Your due for a new video maybe a building of a enclosure from start to finish..
Really would like to see some plans for this enclosure.
Please do an update on this enclosure, if it's still up and running, I would love to build something similar to this.
What, specifically, would you like to see in an update? If I get a moment I can shoot a quick video.
Urovers85 I have a trio of baby Moroccan uros, and for their adult enclosure I'd love to build something like this. I guess I'd just like to see how the enclosure is today, and see if you'd have done anything differently.
For a trio of nigriventris I'd suggest going larger than this (something like 8x3x3). I'd also suggest multiple basking areas and, if you were to do a burrow box, multiple chambers and entrances. This will help prevent conflict over the long haul (my experience with nigriventris is that they can be especially ruthless). As for what I'd do different: 1) keep live plants away from the wall--they tend to get climbed on more this way. The palms are great because they're already up off the floor, but the more access the more the plant will suffer. 2) make the entire burrow box out of coma/PVC board (which I've done already since). That's about it though...the rest seems to be tuned in to my liking.
Urovers85 wow, thanks for all the advice, I was actually planning on building it about 8x4x3, because those are the dimensions of my tegus cage, and I could just stack the cages, also do you mean having multiple burrow boxes, or having multiple entrances to the burrow box?
8x4x3 would be excellent! The larger the enclosure/more personal space the better, especially when it comes to breeding season (females can be extremely aggressive pre/post nesting). That said, plan on a ton of visual barriers to break up line-of-site of cagemates or, if possible, an optional divider to split the enclosure if required (trust me when I say temperament can change very, very quickly).
How do you breed? Is it safe to have sand? Do you sale any of your reptiles?
Hey man I've had a uro for a little now and was looking for some advice
whats the name of that little palm tree?
It's B. recurvata, aka ponytail palm.