Last year we moved from suburbian SW WA to rural central AR. Of course I brought my tortoises with me, and initially set them up in temporary enclosures. Over the Fall and Winter I then proceeded to build their permanent outdoor habitats.
(Ps: if you don't feel like reading and just want to look at photos - scroll down!)
We are out in the boonies, and wildlife abounds. We have bears, cougars, bobcats, raccoons, possums, weasels, coyotes, and rats the size of bunnies. Plus various hawks and buzzards and crows, and a plethora of useful and also of venomous snakes that could definitely make a meal out of a juvenile or baby tortoise. I didn't want to have to bring the tortoises inside every night, so their habitats needed to be absolutely escape proof, as well as predator proof from below and above. In WA, a year before moving, I lost several of my beautiful adults to a male raccoon who developed a taste for tortoise meat... It was heart breaking. He got 2 before I realized what was happening (it was normal for them to dig down in the Summer for days at a time... So I didn't think anything of it when 2 disappeared... Until I found their empty shells below a tree on the other side of the yard). I started to bring everyone inside at 5pm, but he got another one between 2 and 5pm. Then he tore up the (empty) enclosure in the following nights, tipping over their little greenhouse, toppling rocks and logs, digging in the soft dirt. The tortoises only spent mornings and early afternoon outside after that. Here in our new home I wanted them to safely be able to spend the entire warm season (March-Oct) outside.
The previous owners of our property had goats, so there is a large area that has an electric fence around it. This would keep the larger animals out. Within this area, I laid out large 10ft x 10ft squares into which I built the designated tortoise enclosures. First I dug a trench, minimum of 12" deep, but because there is a slight incline, it's 18" at the deepest point. Our soil up here is hard packed clay with veins of shale (slate) at an angle. Most of the digging happened with a 50lb iron break bar and a big old pick axe. Never mind that gyms were closed for Covid, I have never been so ripped in my life after all that trench digging!
Because we get torrential rains here fairly regularly, drainage was very important. I dug a french drain through each of the enclosures, which would guide the water into a gravel filled large hole downhill of the habitats. I also filled the bottom 4" of each trench with drainage rock.
Then I built the walls. We have LOTs of termites out here, so the cedar sides I used in WA would have lasted only weeks or months. I decided to use corrugated metal roofing instead. I built the frame out of treated lumber (which I expect to have to replace about every 5 years), and screwed the roofing panels to that. The 2x4x 10ft lumber top edges are reinforced by braces.
Each 10ft x 10ft enclosure has 6 hinged, lockable lids with hardware cloth, and a solid piece in the middle, also with hardware cloth. The hasp closures are kept locked with a steel quick link.
Inside each enclosure, I added dirt hills, a stone cave with soft diggable dirt inside, a water dish, and lots of plants, some transplanted, some seeded woth tortoise safe weeds and wildflowers. The juveniles have one enclosure, the adult females have one, and each male has a separate 5ft x 10ft male jail.
Here in centeal AR the weather gets very hot in the summer. It easily stays 110+ for weeks on end! Until the fruit trees we planted in the area around the enclosures are larger, I have to create artificial shade. I hung 80% shade cloth, and also zip tied pieces of shade cloth into some of the lids. Additionally, each enclosure has a stone hide that has soft, diggable dirt that goes deep into the ground. With these layers of shade, plus hosing down the area with cold water, I've been able to manage the heat.
A final issue I ran into were insects and arachnids. We treated the whole area eith beneficial nematodes (HB and Sc type) to prevent ticks and fleas. However, chiggers were not affected, and neither were non-ground-dwelling spiders. I have had to remove 3 black widows from the tortoise hides so far, and in May, the chiggers bit the tortoises pretty badly. I sprinkled the whole area in and around the enclosures with diatomaceous earth, and also sprinkled the armpits of each tortoise, as well as their shells (because the chiggers were biting them on the new growth lines too!) with DE as well. This Fall I'm treating all tortoise enclosures with sulfur, which will rain into the soil and kill larval chigger mites. The sulfur, once rained into the soil, will not harm the tortoises once they are back outside in Spring. Hopefully this works - if not I may have to treat with permethrin, but I really don't want to use chemicals... We work so hard to garden organically!! After treating with DE twice more, I saw no more bites on the tortoises.
The only downside to these enclosures is that it's harder to see the tortoises through the hardware cloth. It's also kind of a pain to have to unlock the hasps every time I want to do something... But at least I know they are safe!
(Ps: if you don't feel like reading and just want to look at photos - scroll down!)
We are out in the boonies, and wildlife abounds. We have bears, cougars, bobcats, raccoons, possums, weasels, coyotes, and rats the size of bunnies. Plus various hawks and buzzards and crows, and a plethora of useful and also of venomous snakes that could definitely make a meal out of a juvenile or baby tortoise. I didn't want to have to bring the tortoises inside every night, so their habitats needed to be absolutely escape proof, as well as predator proof from below and above. In WA, a year before moving, I lost several of my beautiful adults to a male raccoon who developed a taste for tortoise meat... It was heart breaking. He got 2 before I realized what was happening (it was normal for them to dig down in the Summer for days at a time... So I didn't think anything of it when 2 disappeared... Until I found their empty shells below a tree on the other side of the yard). I started to bring everyone inside at 5pm, but he got another one between 2 and 5pm. Then he tore up the (empty) enclosure in the following nights, tipping over their little greenhouse, toppling rocks and logs, digging in the soft dirt. The tortoises only spent mornings and early afternoon outside after that. Here in our new home I wanted them to safely be able to spend the entire warm season (March-Oct) outside.
The previous owners of our property had goats, so there is a large area that has an electric fence around it. This would keep the larger animals out. Within this area, I laid out large 10ft x 10ft squares into which I built the designated tortoise enclosures. First I dug a trench, minimum of 12" deep, but because there is a slight incline, it's 18" at the deepest point. Our soil up here is hard packed clay with veins of shale (slate) at an angle. Most of the digging happened with a 50lb iron break bar and a big old pick axe. Never mind that gyms were closed for Covid, I have never been so ripped in my life after all that trench digging!
Because we get torrential rains here fairly regularly, drainage was very important. I dug a french drain through each of the enclosures, which would guide the water into a gravel filled large hole downhill of the habitats. I also filled the bottom 4" of each trench with drainage rock.
Then I built the walls. We have LOTs of termites out here, so the cedar sides I used in WA would have lasted only weeks or months. I decided to use corrugated metal roofing instead. I built the frame out of treated lumber (which I expect to have to replace about every 5 years), and screwed the roofing panels to that. The 2x4x 10ft lumber top edges are reinforced by braces.
Each 10ft x 10ft enclosure has 6 hinged, lockable lids with hardware cloth, and a solid piece in the middle, also with hardware cloth. The hasp closures are kept locked with a steel quick link.
Inside each enclosure, I added dirt hills, a stone cave with soft diggable dirt inside, a water dish, and lots of plants, some transplanted, some seeded woth tortoise safe weeds and wildflowers. The juveniles have one enclosure, the adult females have one, and each male has a separate 5ft x 10ft male jail.
Here in centeal AR the weather gets very hot in the summer. It easily stays 110+ for weeks on end! Until the fruit trees we planted in the area around the enclosures are larger, I have to create artificial shade. I hung 80% shade cloth, and also zip tied pieces of shade cloth into some of the lids. Additionally, each enclosure has a stone hide that has soft, diggable dirt that goes deep into the ground. With these layers of shade, plus hosing down the area with cold water, I've been able to manage the heat.
A final issue I ran into were insects and arachnids. We treated the whole area eith beneficial nematodes (HB and Sc type) to prevent ticks and fleas. However, chiggers were not affected, and neither were non-ground-dwelling spiders. I have had to remove 3 black widows from the tortoise hides so far, and in May, the chiggers bit the tortoises pretty badly. I sprinkled the whole area in and around the enclosures with diatomaceous earth, and also sprinkled the armpits of each tortoise, as well as their shells (because the chiggers were biting them on the new growth lines too!) with DE as well. This Fall I'm treating all tortoise enclosures with sulfur, which will rain into the soil and kill larval chigger mites. The sulfur, once rained into the soil, will not harm the tortoises once they are back outside in Spring. Hopefully this works - if not I may have to treat with permethrin, but I really don't want to use chemicals... We work so hard to garden organically!! After treating with DE twice more, I saw no more bites on the tortoises.
The only downside to these enclosures is that it's harder to see the tortoises through the hardware cloth. It's also kind of a pain to have to unlock the hasps every time I want to do something... But at least I know they are safe!
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