A warm welcome to the forum!I want to add plants to my indoor enclosure. I seen a lot of people use spider plants. which kind are the big leaves?
Are these to plant in enclosures or just to feed them? Or both? If there's a main thread, feel free to point me there. Thanks!safe plants for tortoise habitat:
- Bael fruit (Aegle marmelos)
- Bamboo (various species)
- Banana or plantain (Musa species)
- Bignay (Anti esma bunius)
- Breadfruit (Artrocarpus incisa)
- Coconut palm (Cocos nucifera)
- Fishtail palm (Caryota urens)
- Horseradish tree (Moringa pterygosperma)
- Lotus (Nelumbo species)
- Mango (Mangifera indica)
- Manioc (Manihot utillissima)
- Nipa palm (Nipa fruticans)
- Papaya (Carica papaya)
- Persimmon (Diospyros virginiana)
- Rattan palm (Calamus species)
- Sago palm (Metroxylon sagu)
- Sterculia (Sterculia foeti a)
- Sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum)
- Sugar palm (Arenga pinnata)
- Sweetsop (Annona squamosa)
- Taro (Colocasia and Alocasia species)
- Water lily (Nymphaea odorata)
- Wild fig (Ficus species)
- Wild rice (Zizania aquatica)
- Wild yam (Dioscorea species)
Do you have an online vendor that's good to buy from for indoor plants? Or do you pick them up locally?From this list, I would say they are for the outdoor pen. For indoors - spider plants, boston fern, carex, coleus, tradescantia zebrina, prayer plant, hosta and many others are safe.
No, I don't know any (I'm across the pondDo you have an online vendor that's good to buy from for indoor plants? Or do you pick them up locally?
I'm on Biodude's website bc im looking for something I can use next week. Since the humidity will be suoer high in the enclosure, I assume I should go with tropical plant species. Any thoughts on that front?No, I don't know any (I'm across the pond).
You can repot store-bought plants in clean organic soil (wash the roots and rinse plant when repotting) and then propagate newly grown cuttings. That's easy with spider plant plantlets and tradescantia and harder but doable with prayer plant and boston fern. Or you can quarantine bought plants for, approximately, 6 months after repotting and before adding to the enclosure. Some plants like coleus or chia are easier and faster to grow from seeds
If you have something growing in your yard for a while and not treated with pesticides and such, I think you can safely repot and add such plants to the enclosure without a 6 month quarantine.
Not all tropical plants are good snacks for sulcatas (e.g. I would not use pothos and "elephant's ear"). Other plants I've mentioned above (https://tortoiseforum.org/threads/plants.136947/post-2153404) should be doing great in high humidity environment. You will just need a bright ambient light (e.g. grow light LED) and avoid overwatering.I'm on Biodude's website bc im looking for something I can use next week. Since the humidity will be suoer high in the enclosure, I assume I should go with tropical plant species. Any thoughts on that front?
Okay I'm able to find the ferns and spider plants on these reptile sites at least. All others are nowhere to be found (at least on those sites). Thanks for your input.Not all tropical plants are good snacks for sulcatas (e.g. I would not use pothos and "elephant's ear"). Other plants I've mentioned above (https://tortoiseforum.org/threads/plants.136947/post-2153404) should be doing great in high humidity environment. You will just need a bright ambient light (e.g. grow light LED) and
Maybe you've seen this thread (and its spin-offs and sequels):Okay I'm able to find the ferns and spider plants on these reptile sites at least. All others are nowhere to be found (at least on those sites). Thanks for your input.
I saw on another thread (and now I can't find it) that there's a grass seed kid that has starter grass with it and it doesn't take much light. Have you seen that thread? I'd like to get that if it's good for sulcatas.
Probably, you can add tradescantia callisia and peperomia from this list.Looks like spider plant is out of stock so I'm getting the Boston Fern. Would someone be able to look through this Reptile plant list at Josh Frog's to see if there's anything else that would be safe and okay for high humidity?
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Plants for Pets
joshsfrogs.com
Some plants benefit from indirect light (looks like boston fern is one of them). I'm not a "green thumb" so can't reliably tell how to better arrange plants and lights. As for tortoise, I prefer to have one part of the enclosure (cold end) to be in shade and shift ambient LED light slightly towards the basking area.Yay, looks like a lot of Peperomia I can get! thank you!
Right now I just have a 36" LED light. Should I get 2 of these so the plants can span throughout or does it make more sense to just have them on the cooler side?

You are welcome! When you get the plants - try to propagate and grow some cuttings, so you don't have to order them again every couple of weeksHere is what I ordered. They all had very similar watering/lighting needs. Thank you @Alex and the Redfoot! You're amazing!
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I am absolutely terrible with plants but I will youtube that and see what I can do.You are welcome! When you get the plants - try to propagate and grow some cuttings, so you don't have to order them again every couple of weeks![]()
Yep, you should have a mother plant somewhere since tortoises can chomp plants up quite fast.You are welcome! When you get the plants - try to propagate and grow some cuttings, so you don't have to order them again every couple of weeks![]()