Tanandgreenmachine
New Member
hello, I’m looking to adopt a hatchling or juvi tortoise. I’m open to all breeds except Sulcata. I live in SoCal.
I breed redfoots and they do great down there. There $105 without shipping. Really healthy And make great pets.hello, I’m looking to adopt a hatchling or juvi tortoise. I’m open to all breeds except Sulcata. I live in SoCal.
Hi.hello, I’m looking to adopt a hatchling or juvi tortoise. I’m open to all breeds except Sulcata. I live in SoCal.
Our climate here is very hot in summer, 100+ nearly very day, and cold in winter, 50s and 60s mostly, and it is VERY dry year round. RFs don't tend to do very well here at all, even with tremendous time, effort and expense.I breed redfoots and they do great down there. There $105 without shipping. Really healthy And make great pets.
I have friend who plants bushes and also sets up sprinklers, and also for the cold nights he uses pig blankets for there hides its not that hard to provide a suitable habitat for redfoots in Cali.Our climate here is very hot in summer, 100+ nearly very day, and cold in winter, 50s and 60s mostly, and it is VERY dry year round. RFs don't tend to do very well here at all, even with tremendous time, effort and expense.
It is worth noting, that when looking at what its like to create a habitat in "California", it is quite different than saying "Florida" or "Kansas". There is no single climate type for California. We have everything from pure alpine at Lake Tahoe, to mild, never hot, foggy Monterey, to the extreme desert of Barstow. Sacramento is totally different than San Diego. San Francisco is totally different than Bakersfield. When talking California, its like saying.. "its not hard to keep a sulcata in the United States".I have friend who plants bushes and also sets up sprinklers, and also for the cold nights he uses pig blankets for there hides its not that hard to provide a suitable habitat for redfoots in Cali.
It is worth noting, that when looking at what its like to create a habitat in "California", it is quite different than saying "Florida" or "Kansas". There is no single climate type for California. We have everything from pure alpine at Lake Tahoe, to mild, never hot, foggy Monterey, to the extreme desert of Barstow. Sacramento is totally different than San Diego. San Francisco is totally different than Bakersfield. When talking California, its like saying.. "its not hard to keep a sulcata in the United States".
Have you done it here? I have. Know many other people who have tried and failed too. As I said, its not impossible, but it usually doesn't go very well. They need ambient humidity that we just don't have and bushes and sprinklers don't provide it. I've tried many times and many ways.I have friend who plants bushes and also sets up sprinklers, and also for the cold nights he uses pig blankets for there hides its not that hard to provide a suitable habitat for redfoots in Cali.