http://www.amazon.com/Foxfarm-FX1400...c+potting+soil
Please advise, ty.
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http://www.amazon.com/Foxfarm-FX1400...c+potting+soil
Please advise, ty.
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Depends greatly on how you intend to construct your viv. However in all cases I'd say it's unnecessary. Especially if you are not going to have live plants.
The other part of the equation is what kind of toads are planning to keep. Mine spend most of their time in the water, some on a rock, very little on the dry except to snag a cricket or other food.
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I've never looked into the habitats for them. I did find a bunch of what I felt were good info sources just by googling "Eastern American Toad Care" and "Fowler's Toad Care". From what I've just recently Googled, I would think some clean peat moss or coco fiber (echo-earth) mixed with some pine-bark mulch plus some leaf litter is all you need. You can likely do it cheap if you just go down to a Home Depot or other big box store with a garden center. You really don't need what amounts to potting soil unless you intend to add live plants to your viv. And as I said in my previous post, even then it's not necessary. It also looks to me that you are going to need a couple decent size viv's just to keep a couple of each. Probably in the 15 plus gallon range.
Also looks like they are voracious eaters. So if you don't raise your own then you better check the prices of crickets and other insects they like.
Maybe now that you've named what you are interested in, some others with some knowledge about them will comment. I'm limited to just what I've had to learn to maintain a couple Fire-belly Toads that I was left with after my son went off to college.
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Thanks, my enclosure for them is 70 quarts / 17.5 gallons but is wider instead of taller. So I think I should have 2 toads in there so that they have enough room even when they are fully grown. I wound up mixing some organic potting soil with some loose eco earth for the substrate. I saved money on everything else, though. Their caves are two flower pots turned over and half-buried in the substrate, and then their soaking dish is a dog food bowl that I put some small smooth river stones in to serve as steps for climbing out. For food, a local reptile store sells 50 waxworms for $4.00, and medium hornworms for $1 each. Then there are bait shops here that sell nightcrawlers for roughly 40 cents each that I can dust with calcium powder on occasion, for when the toads are big enough to eat that big of food.
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Crickets and night-crawlers are very easy to raise on your own. The worms are probably easier to deal with if you live in an apartment. Crickets I recommend you have space for three to four Rubbermaid containers in a garage or out-building. Neither require much expense. Just plenty of vegetable and fruit scraps from the kitchen.
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