Recently I was at a reptile show. When one of the venders asked what kind of reptiles I was keeping, I said "none" and I mentioned my salamanders. This leads to the vender advises me that my temps for my salamanders are all wrong and they will starve slowly starve to death in my setup. Naturally I am very alarmed and concerned to hear this, I'm trying to raise these to adulthood not kill them off. I was told that my salamanders being kept at 60F room temps are too warm to hibernate and too cold to eat and function normally. So I bought them a heater, came home and started to check around again concerning heating, only to find information that says don't heat a spotted salamander terrarium. AGGGHHHH!!. '
I did a head count recently on my salamanders when I moved them a couple of days ago and all land salamanders were accounted for( their mortality rates seem to drop once they get on land as none of my land salamanders have died so far). I'm thinking what to do?. Don't fix what isn't broke?. But the thought of them slowly starving is worrisome and I limit handling them and since they normally hide, it can be difficult to monitor them as much as my fish.
I was also told they need a special reptile bulb for a light /day cycle. So I bought them a special reptile bulb. OK, so I figure this can't hurt if I'm wrong and if it ends up they don't need it, I can use it for my crested geckos. Of course I am also trying to raise crickets to feed my salamanders and failing miserably at this. I got a crucial piece of information from Petco, the crickets sold in stores are all tropical species and that's why they need so much heat. So now I need a heat lamp so my crickets can breed. And here I was trying to save money by breeding crickets instead of buying more at the store.
I swear I'm now spending more money on my salamander setup then my new cresties here.
In the meantime I've turned up the house thermostat for all of the critters here who seem to need more heat then expected and what happens?, it gets colder in here. I've even concerned for the new baby cresties who are supposed to thrive at room temps, when my room temps are now 55- 60 F.
I was so very temped to buy a cane toad at the reptile show, but I'm glad I didn't because I am keeping busy problem solving and spending a lot of money on my current two herp setups here. Maybe a cane toad will be "in the cards" for next time. I will also need a larger terrarium, since I don't have proper housing for an adult cane toad, could only house a small one.
Ok, so I most tempted at the cane toads, luckily my favorite frogs were not for sale there at all( temperate species). Granted I did enjoy seeing a grey tree frog setup!. Sorry to say, tropical frogs are cute, but I tend to see them as substitutes for the frogs I prefer. It happens, I am more attracted to some species then others.
In the case of frogs, the temperate species are the ones I used to keep temp as a child.
I'm working on a couple different insect cultures, including culturing a steady supply of fruit flies so maybe I work towards having grey tree frogs

. I've been hesitate to bring in critters who rely on live foods to survive when I have live food cultures "crash" on me. Thus why cane toads are an attractive choice.