Drainage Systems for Cages - get creative!

Free range drains.. also work with cages...

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Automated drainage:

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WOW!!!!
 
So here are some pictures of my custom cage stand that I had built for a pretty tight space in my apartment that houses 2 cages. In one is a full grown veiled who is around 2 years old and in the other is a panther who is about 5 months or so. In case you have a small space to work with as well hopefully this helps :)

The box is 46" by 25" deep and about 2ft. tall and on one side is an 18"x18"x36" cage on the other side is a 24"x24"x48" cage. The door has two sets of hinges and opens up from the corner outward, this is because of the middle part of my closet which is built in and cannot be taken off. Inside the box are regular home depot buckets that sit underneath the drains which are just regular sink or bath drains. The drains themselves are attached to shower liner and this covers the top of the box where the cages sit on top of. There are 17"x17" holes cut underneath the liner so that the drains naturally weigh down the liner forcing the water to go down into the buckets. To clean up the liners and after they lay excrement I just take some clorox wipes and wipe it all down, very simple and pretty hassle free besides the tight squeeze.

I know this forum and many others helped us in designing the whole area and habitat, and I can say my guys are much happier because of it. It is also less work I have to do which is a huge plus.

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Can anyone think of a (reasonable priced around $50) drainage system for a 4x2ft free range. I wanted it to be giant, but I think I'll probably have to downgrade to a 2x2.
 
Multiple large plastic bins underneath, just cut the holes in locations not near where they meet. Not sure if that works or not without seeing any pics or better description.
 
I took the substrate tray that comes with a Reptibreeze, flipped it over, and used a heat gun & some weight to shape it into a sloping floor that leads to a plastic drain in the center.

Shown here without the drain. For that I just cut a hole in the middle and added a $2 plastic snap-in drain.

From there it runs through the aluminum table/stand that I made for the cages. The tops look like this:

Right now it drains straight into a 2 gal bucket placed under it. I might run some hose from the drain so I can move the bucket to one corner and maximize space on the shelf under the table.
 
I just took the bottom out of my cage and put screen down on the shelf the put the cage down so now its an open bottom then i put corrugated board under the next shelf and angle it so it drains into a ice cream bucket also it lets all my plants drain so they don't stay wet
 
My little one is living in a small 16X16x30 enclosure for now since he is about 4 months old now. I took the bottom off his reptibreeze and found this tray at lowes that happens to fit perfectly on the bottom of his enclosure. I put his regular substrate tray underneath that then. I need to build a little platform for the enclosure to rest on so I can just pull the substrate tray out to dump... but seems to be working for now.

Is having this type of bottom ok? It's metal.
 

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I purchased a cheap vanity with top at The Home Depot. It was $80. Drilled small holes in the bottom of the Rebtibreeze screen cage and it drips into the sink and then down into a small rubbermaid trashcan I have underneath where I also keep all of my supplies and bugs.

Love this Idea.
 
I have a laybin in with one of my cages , it keeps seeming to puddle even though I have a hole in the bottom, and I’ve taken it out to dry before with a blow dryer, while rotating the sand to try and keep it that “diggable texture”, I was just wondering do you guys have some setup examples of how your drainage works for a permanent laybin ?
 
drain for glass bottom cage?

I have a 2'x2'x4' glass and mesh cage with a glass bottom. Doesn anyone have any ideas on how to create a drain in the bottom of the glass? I could make a false bottom but that would reduce the area for Hercules and seems like it would have to be a pretty large false bottom to capture an adequate amount of water. Thanks!

Not ideal, but you could invest in a cheap aquarium pump to suction the water out of a collection tub. Just one of the ideas I'm considering although I don't have a glass bottom cage, I use large plant drainage saucers. I have to remove the plant and then empty the saucers manually.
 
I purchased a pedestal sink cabinet from home depot to use as a stand and cut an 18 1/2" wide section out of the top, then braced two 1x2's across to hold the cage. I then replaced the acrylic bottom with two layers of fluorescent light diffusing grid. Directly below the cage is a cat litter box to catch water, urate, bugs, etc. It cams out pretty nice, actually!
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I really like how you created this. Is there a way you could give me more detail on how to do this for myself? I just brought home an Elliot's chameleon a few days ago and when he gets bigger, I want to make a setup like this.
 
I really like how you created this. Is there a way you could give me more detail on how to do this for myself? I just brought home an Elliot's chameleon a few days ago and when he gets bigger, I want to make a setup like this.
Not sure that this member will be replying to you as this is an old but obviously on-going thread.
 
Wow great ideas everyone!!

Well, I don't have any pictures of my drainage system but I do have a video of my chameleon cage setup that I made and I describe my drainage system a little. You could always check it out here

Basically I bought myself a plastic dresser from Walmart for about $16. It has 3 drawers. My cage is placed on top of the dresser so what I did was use the first drawer as a drainage system. I drilled holes from the bottle of the cage into the dresser so now whenever I mist, the water just drips into the drawer and whenever it's a quarter full of water, I just dump it out and start again. It was pretty simple. Hope this helps anyone!

Awesome video man! Helped me out a bunch and you set up seems really good for reptar and pretty affordable ?
 
I used acrylic to build the drain. Then made a 5 foot bag out of coco fiber mat and filled the inside with the goshes frogs light weight rock. This was then blaced into the acrylic sump and placed over two 1 3/4 drains that go to a 25 gallon holding tank.
 
Has anyone come up with a system for draining the water out of a Dragon Strand Drainage Tray, either the Tall or Large Atrium cages?

The 25" tray seems to preclude any kind of center drain due to its raised center design.
Can't find a good picture of the Large Atrium tray, so I don't know what I'd be dealing with.

I'm kinda surprised this hasn't been addressed in these TOTL enclosures.
 
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