I will follow your advice then and I will gradually humidify the tortoise terrarium and see how they react. I'll also try to raise the terrarium temperature a few degrees adding some sort of heating thing..Juan V,
You are spreading the same misinformation that we have all been subjected to for the past 25 years or so, since sulcatas became available to the general public here in the early 90s. This information, your information, is based on incorrect assumptions that have been repeated over and over again. People like you (and formerly me too) come along and read all this old stuff and we believe it. It all sounds so logical and founded in what appear to be facts, but it is wrong. How do I know it is wrong? Because following this information and following the advice of all the experts has failed all of us for decades. With lots of input from lots of sources, I and several others have finally figured out what IS correct and what DOES work. Dave Friend from the Ojai sulcat project has conceded as much in several personal conversations, but he has never taken the time to re-do his website, unfortunately.
Many of your claims are false. Please allow me to dispute them.
1. The African rainy season last 3-4 months, not just one. This is according to my friend Tomas Diagne of the African Chelonian Institute who has lived there in sulcata territory his whole life. According to Tomas, the brush is so full and thick within a couple of weeks of the start of the rainy season that is is impenetrable. At the base of these plants is where baby sulcata spend their first few months, in the rain and African heat. During this time of year it is hot rainy, humid and there are puddles and marshes every where. After that time, when the dry season creeps in, they spend their time in warm, humid underground burrows. None of these facts are mentioned in old books, websites or anywhere else.
2. 69 degrees is much too cold for baby sulcatas. This is one common factor that I agree with many of the old time keepers on. There is no cold season over there. Even when their "winter" temps dip into the high 60's, there daytime highs are near or above 100. This results in average burrow temps of 80+ degrees. At no time would a young sulcata, or an adult for that matter, experience temps in the 60's in the wild. You had problems because you kept them too cold.
3. You have asserted that you think 80% humidity is both unnatural and unhealthy multiple times here. You are wrong on both counts. You say this because of old stuff you read and your own mistake of letting your babies be too cold. I say you are wrong based on what I know happens in the wild and what I have personally observed through multiple experiments over many years. You are wrong because I have personally raised HUNDREDS of sulcatas (and other species...) this way with ZERO problems. Not a single sick one ever. That is not coincidence and it is not luck. In fact hundreds of people all over the world are now using these techniques and reporting the same success.
4. You say "1) SUN, AS MUCH OF IT AS POSSIBLE". Actually this is not the case for hatchlings. Too much sun in our outdoor enclosures dries them out and greatly slows their rates of growth when compared to their siblings raised mostly indoors on the same amount and same type of food. Some sunshine is good, but hatchlings in the wild would not be seeing much direct sunshine while hiding under their heavy thickets of vegetation. They would instead see high humidity and warm temps under there.
You have made the mistake of making all sorts of assertions with no evidence to back up your claims. On the other hand, I have thousands of post and pictures to back up my claims, along with about 50 tortoises that prove every word I've typed here. Growing a sulcata in a typical indoor enclosure with 30% humidity will result in stunted, pyramided tortoises, if they survive. How do I know this? Because I have done it many times in years past. How many sulcatas have YOU raised with high humidity and the correct temperatures? None. The truth is that you don't know if this method is good or bad, because you have never done it correctly. I had to prove what I was saying was true by demonstrating it. I have publicly demonstrated it many many times now, and hundreds, if not thousands, of other people have now demonstrated it as well. For any of us to take you seriously, you will need to demonstrate your assertions as well. You will need to get 12 clutch mates. Raise 6 my way, and 6 your way, and then let's compare results after a few months or a couple of years. I have already done this many times, and that is how I know how your experiment will turn out. YOU still need to learn how it will turn out.
You took the time to read about how we recommend housing sulcatas here on this forum and jumped to conclusions based on previous misinformation that you were taught, but you appear to have skipped over all the thousands of posts and pics of smooth healthy, warm humid raised tortoises. I hope you will now take the time to correct this oversight. I will help you:
http://www.tortoiseforum.org/threads/the-end-of-pyramiding.15137/
http://www.tortoiseforum.org/threads/the-end-of-pyramiding-ii-the-leopards.18931/
http://www.tortoiseforum.org/threads/meet-toms-sulcatas.56465/
http://www.tortoiseforum.org/threads/meet-toms-leopard-tortoises.56643/
I hope other members will chime in and post links to their own threads of their own smooth, healthy tortoises raised with these new and improved methods.
One last thing: I agree with your opinions on diet. Just so you don't think I'm entirely opposed to everything you had to say in your initial foray onto our forum here.
Welcome. I hope we are able to change your mind about some of the old outdated info you are still following.
Thank you so much for the information. I am a bit reluctant to maxing the hummidity but i'll follow your advice and see how they gradually react to this. I'll also think of altering the Software that controls the temperature to include this changes.
Maybe something very cool can come up