Quote Originally Posted by irThumper View Post
Ok, good deal. The plants had what appeared to be Osmocote in the soil too. I will have had the small ones 6 months as of April, so will give them a nice bath before transplanting into the container they are going into. I've hear Sanseveria like a bit of a dryer more desert like soil that is well drained because they hate wet feet and are susceptible to root rot, I was wondering about a sandy organic cactus soil but was worried about sand and the frogs; could the Sanseveria be planted in this and then topped off with ABG or will straight ABG be fine for Snake plants?

Oh, and I'm going to be putting the potted plants in the terrarium vs planting the terrarium itself. I've heard using ferts for fresh water aquarium plants would be safe for frogs, but is this proven?
Hi. Been away for awhile, but I'm baaaack!

Anyway, I've got a couple of snake plants growing in my Grey tree frog viv. One of them is planted directly in the wet gravel substrate, and has been for a few months. It seems to be doing fine, and is currently putting out some new leaves. The other one is planted in ABG mix in a cork bark planter, and it is also doing really well, putting out some impressive new growth currently. I think they are one of the tougher, more versatile plants, and tolerant of quite a wide range of conditions, so you probably can't go wrong, whatever you end up planting it in, though it probably will spend some time acclimating.

I got both plants from http://www.neherpetoculture.com/index BTW. The site also has a good article on their recommended protocol for processing plants prior to introducing them into a viv http://www.neherpetoculture.com/plan...singprocedures. I've modified the procedures a bit for my own plants. If I think something's been exposed to pesticides, I do a vinegar/water rinse, since this is what's recommended for cleaning pesticides off of fruits and veggies. After a bad experience with mealybugs, i now clean with a light mix of bleach and Dawn, with a really good rinse, and then a long soaking in plain water afterwards. And you can get some really nasy pests, even with plants from Lowes, and even if they've been heavily treated with pesticides.

Also, in my experience, frogs do a pretty good job of providing fertilizer, without any need to add anything else.

I've been doing lots of messing around with plants the past few months, since it's been too cold here to ship the new frogs that I've been wanting to get, and the once it warmed up, they were out of stock. I should be finally getting the frogs in sometime next week.