Turtlepete
Well-Known Member
Fantastic construction, Kelly. Very impressed. I'm incredibly curious what these new species your expecting are. They would have to be a high humidity/warm climate species?….Very curious indeed
.
But plants make things sooo prettyMy guess is no bother for plants in the Manouria pen. They'll all be gone anyways, haha.
Well it is kinda bare in there. Manouria eat everything. Am not kidding toxic or not they will eat it. So I was toying with the idea of making a planter in the middle of the pens and putting some plants they can't get to. Still have some minor touches on the building to do. Like ledges for potted plants and stuff like that. So plants for sure will be integrated in somewhere in there.Are plants the next step?? It's a green house so I'm assuming it wouldn't stay bare, right?![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Thanks. The mystery torts are actually not high humidity at all. The quandary continues. MuahahaFantastic construction, Kelly. Very impressed. I'm incredibly curious what these new species your expecting are. They would have to be a high humidity/warm climate species?….Very curious indeed.
Very much so. Dearth the phayrei, is a turd butt sand which. He likes to scrap the leaves and mulch into the pond. And those ponds are 4' by almost 5' 5-6" deep. So it's a lot of work when he does that. He does it in any enclosure he's in. Quite a character he is.Awesome tortoise castle!! Have they enjoyed exploring?![]()
Thanks. The mystery torts are actually not high humidity at all. The quandary continues. Muahaha
I had some offspring back in the day from zovikian but lost them to a long long story of a bad decision with a "friend". The pure travancore are very very rare here. Even in Europe they're very rare but more common there here, I know of 3 legal shipments from 1960-1980s from India of those guys. I speak with the curator here and there over I. India that works with them I. There natural range. They only have 8 total specimens in there care for captive reproduction. They are a very very endangered numbered animal. Somewhere less than yniphora wild numbers are close to travancore total numbers in the world. A very forgotten and little talked about species for sure.Ohhh, I see. You posted a picture of the thermometer with a hygrometer, and it read 90s and 100% humidity, I now realize that was your greenhouse and not the Manouria Mansion. I was thinking, no way, 100% humidity would probably kill those other guys….
Now I am really, really curious….. Wish you the best of luck!
Do you work with Travencoria, or know anyone that does? Elongata are common enough, and forstenii rare but still possible to acquire, yet I have only seen one captive Travencore on this forum, the guy from ATC, Mr. Hermes I believe? Shame they aren't more common. I've heard they were imported along with elongata and forstenii in mass numbers yet nobody could tell the difference.
I had some offspring back in the day from zovikian but lost them to a long long story of a bad decision with a "friend". The pure travancore are very very rare here. Even in Europe they're very rare but more common there here, I know of 3 legal shipments from 1960-1980s from India of those guys. I speak with the curator here and there over I. India that works with them I. There natural range. They only have 8 total specimens in there care for captive reproduction. They are a very very endangered numbered animal. Somewhere less than yniphora wild numbers are close to travancore total numbers in the world. A very forgotten and little talked about species for sure.
But yes the "greenhouse" is ridiculous. When wearing glasses it's very difficult to keep them uncovered from the hot extreme humid environment in there. When acquired I will let everyone one what the "special" species are. For sure extremely rare in the United States and Europe in collections.
I had some offspring back in the day from zovikian but lost them to a long long story of a bad decision with a "friend". The pure travancore are very very rare here. Even in Europe they're very rare but more common there here, I know of 3 legal shipments from 1960-1980s from India of those guys. I speak with the curator here and there over I. India that works with them I. There natural range. They only have 8 total specimens in there care for captive reproduction. They are a very very endangered numbered animal. Somewhere less than yniphora wild numbers are close to travancore total numbers in the world. A very forgotten and little talked about species for sure.
But yes the "greenhouse" is ridiculous. When wearing glasses it's very difficult to keep them uncovered from the hot extreme humid environment in there. When acquired I will let everyone one what the "special" species are. For sure extremely rare in the United States and Europe in collections.
Oh I see…..Man, species like that are so interesting to me. Kind of like Coahulian boxies, right? They come only from the Cuatro Cie'negas Basin (no way I spelled that right…) in Coahulia, Mexico. Restricted range, they are completely dependent upon a single type of habitat. Very interesting. It's even more interesting with these species whose survival isn't even threatened by humans, or at least foremost by humans (as I doubt any of the former exist), but rather threatened by nature and the test of time itself.
So Mark Bells is an individual that worked with them at one time, does he still work with them? Are there any colonies your aware of in the US, or Europe?