
Originally Posted by
Instinct101
I know I've made queries to this time and time again, especially given the season but this is really frustrating me.
How can I reliably keep my pyxie warm in the winter?
I use an infrared 50W bulb during the day and am currently using one of those 75W night glo lights from Wal-Mart (only thing I could at this time of night) in a spare dimmer lamp. I hate having two lamps on lop of a metal screen top (most of its covered with plastic wrap to help with humidity), but I have tried heat cable and a heat mat (rated for 10-20 gallons, for my 15 gal long) and I really don't think getting a bigger mat will help. I have never understood how people get the desired temps with those things, they hardly give off any heat except right the things themselves, by sticking them to the walls. And heat cable, although tapable in a variety of ways, is in the same boat.
Was thinking of getting a night bulb of a lower wattage whenever I got the chance tomorrow, as much as I hate having TWO lamps on even at different times (day and night, rigged with timers).
Current in-tank temps never drop below 70 at night, and I'm not sure what my girl is even making of my efforts anyway seeing as she's been completely buried (all the way to the bottom even) ever since late February. I was planning to attempt to awaken her with warm water come April, or whenever the nights get warm enough that the temp in the room itself stays in the mid 70s.
And what exactly counts as aevistation anyway? It's my understanding they aevistate when things get too dry, but she went down when the substrate was well moist and the temps in the mid to high 80s. If she's. . .sleeping beneath relatively cool, moist substrate, what is that?