Recommendations for 2nd reptile?

Just to be clear, any water you use with reptiles needs to be dechlorinated. If it’s tap water, you should add a dechlorinator to it (unless you’re lucky and live somewhere the tap water doesn’t have chlorine). Bottled spring water or water from a reverse osmosis tap is also good.

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I live in Germany we don’t have chlorine in our water here

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Lucky you! The tap water where I live has so much chlorine that I can smell it every time I turn on the tap. :face_vomiting:

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This is a good plan. They do need the trace minerals from ordinary water sources, even when they’re on a diet of whole prey. Using distilled water to spray mist in the enclosure is fine. Even though the snake may enjoy sampling the droplets, it’s going to get most of its water requirements from its meals and is water dish. No worries about the droplets lacking in minerals.

Do be careful with the calcium supplements. Animals on a diet of whole prey normally get sufficient calcium from their food. Supplements make sense for animals who are breeding and laying eggs. They’re not a bad idea generally on occasion, but it is possible to have too much calcium in the diet. This can lead to problems with the kidneys among other things.

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It’s nice—that burning sting in the sinuses that brings you back to childhood summers at the public pool…

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Oh thats definetely good to know. I guess that means that I will not use the powder anymore for any of my two snakes.

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Don’t waste money on dechlorinated water or chemicals to dechlorinate chlorinated tap water. All you have to do is fill a pitcher or jug with chlorinated tap water and let it sit WITHOUT a lid for 24 hours or so. All of the chlorine will naturally evaporate from the water in that time. Give it more time if you want to make extra sure. Occasionally stirring the water will speed up the process. Bubbling air through the water like with a small aquarium pump will speed it up too. That’s a trick I used back when I kept freshwater fish and I needed to do weekly partial water changes. I would simply fill 2-3 one gallon jugs with tap water and let them sit for a week without the caps/lids on them. Good to go and no money wasted on chemicals.

If you must mist and you have glass or plexiglass, I would definitely use distilled water to avoid spots. I think it’s cheap enough that you won’t go broke. Then use naturally dechlorinated tap water in the water bowl.

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Oh our water is free of any chlorine so I wouldn’t consider to buy dechlorinated water in the first place.

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I know it’s been a few months but I now have her consistently feeding on rodents and she also had a beautiful shed with eyecaps and everything.
We’re also making a lot of progress with handling and she’s climbing onto my hand out of free will!
I’m calling her Nessie btw because of how much time she spends in her water dish.
Her enclosure already seems a bit too small for her given how active she is and how much she has grown so I‘m also considering to build her a 35x17x25 paludarium with a pond area for her to swim in.




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I also got a pacman frog in the meantime as a more or less rescue (he was a class pet at my school and not taken care of very well). As a product of this he is blind on his right eye and incredibly shy but he does a lot better in his new, bigger tank with also better care.




I don‘t have a lot of pics of him yet

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