Heika
New Member
MWheelock said:Hey,
I was so inspired by your dad's creation that I am tempted to try and make a similar cage but I have a couple questions that I am not able to figure out from the pictures.
1) What size/what type mesh did he use on the cage and where did he get it? Is it small enough to contain roaches and crickets, or do you only feed by cup?
2) What type of pan or sink did he use to line the bottom? Where did he get it?(I went to Lowe's today to see if I could find something like that, but only found a shower bottom or laundry sink, both of which don't look as shallow or as small in dimentions.)
3)Is the top portion of the cage afixed to the underlying pan, or do you just use the weight to sit it on top for easier cleaning?
4) Is the metal bar your cham is seen on just a perch or is this part of a misting system? Do you have an in home automated misting system?
Thanks,
Matthew
Hi Matthew!
Sorry, I have been out of town for the weekend. Thanks, it is a great cage.
It was actually my uncle who built it for me... I purchased the supplies, and drew up a basic picture of what I wanted. He took off with it!
I ordered the mesh online from a company on the east coast. It is plastic mesh used for fish pond stuff. I like it.. it hasn't melted from the lights yet, but I am using lower wattages right now because it is warmer in the house. It still remains to be seen if it will withstand higher temperatures. The size is 8 mesh.. approximately 1/8" by 1/8". Roaches can't get out of it, crickets haven't chewed it, blue bottle flies are too big to squeeze through the holes, as are superworms.
The pan is a washing machine drain pan. It is large.. 32" by 30". I actually bought it first, and the cage was built around it to fit it. I bought it at Home Depot in the appliance department. It has little drain hole guides that you can cut out and use on the edges, but I wanted the drain in the middle. My uncle built the cool drain on it with the fittings that were included with the drain pan and a section of PVC pipe.
The top sits inside of the pan, and can be lifted off for cleaning.. although I haven't done that yet. I just use a cleaning rag and wipe out debris from the plastic tray. Cleaning is a cinch with this new cage, much nicer than the old one. It is not bolted down or anything.. the weight is plenty to keep it from moving. It sits flush on the tray too, so no feeders can escape.
That actually isn't a metal bar. It is a piece of bamboo. I have several running from one side of the cage to the other, and use screws to hang them from the screen.
Yes, I have an automated watering system.. a DIY one that I built with a garden sprayer, a water sprinkler timer, water valve and tubing. It works really well for one chameleon cage.
Heika