This week's video is all about my new baby tortoise Stompy, featured in the previous blog post.
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Love
Rebecca x
The story of our garden, built from nothing; and the ever growing collection of pets we share our lives with.
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Showing posts with label Testudo graeca graeca. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Testudo graeca graeca. Show all posts
Monday, 7 May 2018
Tuesday, 1 May 2018
Stompy the Greek Spur-Thigh Tortoise
My new pet - a baby Tortoise!
In my last blog post I mentioned some very strange plants that I'm trying to cultivate. The reason for these oddities is this little chap...
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Stompy the Tortoise |
Or chap-ess...it's hard to tell at this age!
We've named him/her Stompy (for now at least), and for ease I'll refer to this creature in the masculine from now on (otherwise I'll drive myself bonkers!). To be honest, I wanted to call him Om after the Great God Om (Holy Horns) from Terry Pratchett's book "Small Gods", but I think that got vetoed π’
Stompy's Particulars:
- Stompy hatched in September 2017
- He weighs 63 grams (I haven't measured him yet - but his plastron is roughly 6.5cm long)
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Stompy is very dinky - and I have small hands! |
- He is a Testudo graeca graeca or Greek Spur-Thigh Tortoise (not to be confused with the African Spurred Tortoise Centrochelys sulcata, which grows enormous)
- He was bred by a work colleague, who has owned the adults Tilly and Trevor for years and years. Tilly had laid eggs before 2017 but they were never fertile. Then in August 5 babies hatched from a clutch of 6 eggs, then Stompy and one other hatched in September from two more eggs laid a little later.
- Stompy could live to be 100 years old, with the right care - I unfortunately will be long gone by then!
Tortoise Habitat
There are approaching 300 species of tortoise and turtle in the world, 5 of them are known as Mediterranean, and they have all evolved to deal with slightly different environments.The Greek Spur-Thigh Tortoise needs temperatures of around 20-35 degrees Centigrade during the day, the upper end being the all important basking temperature. UVA and UVB light sources are necessary for correct growth and metabolism, and a humidity level of around 40-50% is ideal.
While Stompy is so small, it's not safe for him to be left out in the garden to roam free, getting all his nutrients etc from nature, so we have to try to replicate his natural environment indoors.
The easiest and safest way to do this is by constructing or buying a Tortoise Table. Do not try to house your tortoise in a Vivarium, Terrarium or anything that the tortoise can see through. The first two are impossible to control environmentally, the latter will cause your tortoise to fret about the boundary line, constantly trying to get to what's beyond it.
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Stompy's Tortoise Table |
Research is King
I've spent months researching what Stompy will need to live a long healthy life, and while that doesn't make me an expert, it does mean I understand that Tortoise care is complicated and you can't take shortcuts.
Initial cost is a big factor to bear in mind:
And then there's the cost of the tortoise itself.
Expect to pay around £150 - £250 for a captive bred Tortoise with it's certificates.
Admittedly once the initial set up is done, there will be less ongoing cost, but UVB bulbs need replacing every 6-9 month, substrate can be spot cleaned daily but needs totally replacing periodically, Vet bills must always be taken into account, and finding a good reptile/exotics Vet is harder than you might think, so do your homework, you need everything set up, tested and the basking temperature settled BEFORE you bring your tortoise home.
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Stompy in his mini garden |
Feeding
There are commercial tortoise diets on the market, but by growing the right plants, it is entirely feasible (and healthier) to never need to feed pre-prepared food to your tortoise. I have a several safe houseplants in the table; a Prayer Plant, a Boston Fern and a Spider Plant. I've also planted up six half sized seed trays with plants from my garden like violet, London Pride, hardy geranium, Couch Grass and plantain, plus I've sown seeds of cat grass, dandelion, harebell, zinnia, pansy, marigold and hollyhock, all of which are safe to feed.
It's important to know that what you are feeding is safe for your tortoise to eat, that it hasn't been sprayed with pesticides, fed with chemical fertilizers. treated with slug pellets or been used as a bathroom for visiting dogs and cats.
You can download edible plant lists from The Tortoise Table, plus they have a really fantastic App that you can take with you on your mobile phone.
I can't tell you how helpful The Tortoise Trust and The Tortoise Table websites are. There's a lot of conflicting advice out there, but if you start with these two sites you won't go far wrong.
So, please join me in welcoming Stompy to our family, we're captivated by him.
Love
Rebecca xx
NB All prices quoted correct as of April 2018.
Wednesday, 25 April 2018
I'm Growing Some Really Weird Plants!
Forget Carnivorous Plants, these are even weirder!
This week I've made a YouTube video all about some very odd plants I'm trying to cultivate. Don't be worried, they're just more likely to be the sort of thing a gardener would be pulling up, not planting in the garden...come and see what on earth I'm talking about...Enjoy!
Rebecca xx
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