(Part 2) Best terrarium, bedding, sand & substrate according to redditors

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We found 83 Reddit comments discussing the best terrarium, bedding, sand & substrate. We ranked the 29 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Subcategories:

Terrarium bedding
Terrarium sand
Terrarium substrate

Top Reddit comments about Terrarium Bedding, Sand & Substrate:

u/frito123 · 10 pointsr/reloading

Just a suggestion, in the future instead of paying extra for "tumbling media," get this: lizard bedding. Same stuff, different label. I personally occasionally add a bit of silver polish. It works on all metals and is ammonia free, so it doesn't damage your brass.

u/CorbinDallasMyMan · 2 pointsr/RATS

There are many options for covering wire floors. It can even be as simple as paper or cardboard cut to size (and replaced often).

Peel-and-stick vinyl tiles or cheap sheets of flooring could work but you would need to wipe them clean a couple times a day to prevent your rats from walking around through puddles of their own urine.

Plastic canvas from the craft store could work very well. Urine drips would fall through to the floor below so you wouldn't need to worry about your bubs walking through pee pools. It would also be pretty easy to hold in place with string, zip ties, or clips.

I've also heard of people using reptile zilla liners to line shelves. I guess they can be washed and reused. I've never tried them so I don't know how well they work. Here's a review from someone who eventually switched to fleece mats instead.

I've been very happy using fleece "mats" that have an inner absorbent layer. They can be held to the levels with little clips. I put grommets in the corners so they can be tied to bars of the cage. I made several sets and I swap them out every 3-5 days (as needed).

u/Das_Maechtig_Fuehrer · 2 pointsr/snails

I'm not sure but this is the moss I use and its safeMoss

u/Sunnlight · 2 pointsr/BeardedDragons

Sure. This sand works well and isn't too pricy. It holds heat extremely well and brings out the decor of your terrarium. Its naturally occurring sand and it says where it comes from on the back, if I recall correctly. I think It's from a riverbed or something. All you guys that say that sand is bad are wrong. Calcium sand is bad but their natural habitat is sand. If you plan on getting sand and really care for your beardie get this sand. One thing that helps with accidental ingestion of sand is feeding them in their cage. I take mine out and hand feed them. They only eat their veggies in their tank. If you still feel its safe to use sand I suggest using this its the easiest, cheapest, and best solution IMO.

u/TheBarberOfFleetSt · 1 pointr/leopardgeckos

This is the carpet I'm using. Not sure how thick it is. Not very. The glass is pretty hot, not burning hot but the carpet is barely warm.

u/MrShinyKeys · 1 pointr/snakes

We recently(two or three months ago) switched to this:

Before we used a plastic grass mat that she really seemed to like but figured she would like a flat terrain better(also much easier to clean)
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000MD594W/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1

u/Blood_Sweat_n_Scales · 1 pointr/reptiles

I order my supplies from lllreptile.com or reptilebasics.com I wouldn't recommend putting your snake on a dry substrate like sani-chips if she is a baby just because it's too dry for baby pythons and it can mold if sprayed constantly. Dry coco husk would probably be best. Adults tend to do pretty good on sani-chips due to their overall hardiness. You can find a bag of it on eBay or Amazon for a few bucks.

Substrate:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B000O39QEO

u/FumCase · 1 pointr/Bichirs

Yeah I was going to say a natural brown sand, especially if you want a planted tank. It says brown, but it does have that red tint to bring out the bichirs patterns.

https://www.amazon.com/Exo-Terra-Riverbed-10-Pound-Brown/dp/B001B599D2

u/cowman3456 · 1 pointr/houseplants

I think you need a bigger pot, and less water. Use a mix of tiny bark chunks (like this), potting soil, and vermiculite or perlite.