• Hello guest! Are you a Tegu enthusiast? If so, we invite you to join our community! Our site is specifically designed for you and it's a great place for Tegu enthusiasts to meet online. Once you join you'll be able to post messages, upload pictures of your Tegu and enclosure and have a great time with other Tegu fans. Sign up today! If you have any questions, problems, or other concerns email [email protected]!

what is the best bedding floor

meyfabi

Member
Messages
35
Hello everybody,
I'm searching for the best floor for my tegu Enki (4 months old) cause i encount 2 big problems. For the moment i have beechwood floor.

My first problem with beechwood is he always eat beechwood piece. i never feed him in his terra (except crickets) and i always have problem with his feces... :-(

the second problem is maybe a rub mark or a skin lesion probably due to beechwood so i need to change!!!


So what's for you the best substrate for Tegu???
Thanks
 

Bubblz Calhoun

Moderator
1,000+ Post Club
5 Year Member
Messages
2,402
Location
Las Vegas, NV.
Substrates vary from wood chip types, to eco earth or sand and soil mixtures. I usually use just eco earth but last week added top soil and sand to it.

As for the mark it looks like it was open at one point and is starting to heal, with the way the scales are coming in around it. It doesn't look to me like a rub mark though. I don't know if it was cut somehow or what but would definitely take it to a vet and have it checked out. To try and get a better idea of what's going on, if it needs to be closed to heal better and or whether or not you should take it off of substrate for a while to help it heal and prevent infection. Actually taking it off of substrate and keeping an eye on it for a while would be a good idea anyway just in case.
 

meyfabi

Member
Messages
35
Bubblz Calhoun said:
Substrates vary from wood chip types, to eco earth or sand and soil mixtures. I usually use just eco earth but last week added top soil and sand to it.

As for the mark it looks like it was open at one point and is starting to heal, with the way the scales are coming in around it. It doesn't look to me like a rub mark though. I don't know if it was cut somehow or what but would definitely take it to a vet and have it checked out. To try and get a better idea of what's going on, if it needs to be closed to heal better and or whether or not you should take it off of substrate for a while to help it heal and prevent infection. Actually taking it off of substrate and keeping an eye on it for a while would be a good idea anyway just in case.

thanks a lot for your reply! ok for your substrate cause it's a real problem for my tegu.
i'll went to a vet to know more about this strange mark.
 

Little Wise Owl

Member
5 Year Member
Messages
334
I use a pure soil/sand mixture because I noticed a lot of tegus having problems on the commonly recommended cypress mulch and other wood chips (ingestion, blockage, prolapse, etc)

Soil/sand holds burrow really well and allows them to utilize their natural burrowing instinct.
 

meyfabi

Member
Messages
35
Little Wise Owl said:
I use a pure soil/sand mixture because I noticed a lot of tegus having problems on the commonly recommended cypress mulch and other wood chips (ingestion, blockage, prolapse, etc)

Soil/sand holds burrow really well and allows them to utilize their natural burrowing instinct.

;-) thanks
 

Ntyvirus

New Member
Messages
89
Once I build his outdoor pen I'm going to use dirt and sand but right now I have mine on a couple inches of cypress and keep an eye on him when he eats
 

Little Wise Owl

Member
5 Year Member
Messages
334
One of our males won't eat if his food bowl is on top of his hide box. Instead, he prefers to poop on the hide box, so we have to put his bowl on the substrate. We watch him eat and he never drops any food on the substrate, so we thought he was safe.

One day he stopped eating. It was going on almost 2 weeks, with no eating, yet he was having very, very watery stools. Finally he had a great big poop. Right in the middle of this poop was a chunk of substrate about the size of half a banana (no, we didn’t go fishing thru the poop, you could see it sticking out)!!! I don't know when or even how he ate the substrate, but he did, and that's why he was plugged up and why he stopped eating.

From my breeder regarding the ingestion of substrate.
 

Skeetzy

Member
Messages
380
I too use a sand/soil mixture. I was so against going this route, since I like the look of nearly every other substrate more, but it's just so much more natural. I will more than likely use it for the life of my tegu.
 

Members online

No members online now.

Forum statistics

Threads
20,103
Messages
177,826
Members
10,336
Latest member
mightytegu
Top