onarock said:Dont think I ever stated "out of line" Doc. If you read this thread, I think I started out asking the question "what are the benefits"? A question still not answered. Can the same thing be accomplished at 98, 95 or 90 my experience and my torts tell me yes. If a tortoise can metabolize, fight infection and thrive at temps around 95 why do we give them or better yet promote temps of 110+? It stands to reason that if you provide such extreme temps that you also need to provide extreme humidity, spraying and soaking. I guess what I'm suggesting is we maintain our tortoises at lower basking temps and less humidity and achieve the same results. Not trying to be sarcastic or argumenative, but does what I write seem logical to you, that we are fighting one extreme (basking of 110+) with another (humidity over 80% and constant basking and soaking)?
Don't you keep your torts outside year around? If that is the case, then this argument doesn't even really effect you or the way in which you keep your torts. Now, if you are saying that when it's 95 in Hawaii, your outside torts temps don't get above that temp, I say that you need a new thermometer and you are NOT raising your torts at 90, 95 or even 98 degrees as you suggest the lower 48 tort owners to prescribe to. I can appreciate your arguement, but I think being where you are, it is natural to take for granted certain advantages that you have over us on the mainland without realizing what your torts are actually experiencing (i.e. the effects of radiant heating and fairly constant temps). I will continue to provide adequate humidities and higher basking temps and let the torts decide. As for this subject, I think I've beaten this horse enough.