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You'd have to have all hanging plants.
Thanks for the input psychobunny and Mow. I did the drill thing. In order to have it drain quick enough I had to put holes that the crickets could get out of, so I am now switching it to screen as we speak. I took a little different approach the. Probably what is normally done- I'll post pics when I'm done
Ok here's what I did! Took the plastic from the bottom- cut a big square out of it, hot glued screen to it time will tell if that was a good idea or terrible one. I like the idea of being able to removed the entire bottom and clean it without disturbing the entire cage. So far so good-
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If you have access to a staple gun that would be stronger then hot glue. Just a thought
I think if you stapled you would still need to hot glue to keep the feeders in.
Nick
Yeah that's why I went with the hot glue. It should hold I think. It's working great. The water is no long running towards the corner and down the wood.
Julia,
If this doesn't work out over time, which it did not for us. We switched to a thick piece of plexy glass (aka plastic) and drilled holes all over it. Holds great weight and drains really good. If you de ide to change let me know and I will take a picture for you.
I can't stand non-screen bottoms. For my DIY cages, I've just been splining the screen into the bottom frame. I would have thought most brands would be the same, eliminating the need for hot glue and making a complete seal of the bottom so bugs can't get out.
I use pots on the bottom too. Indoors I use the currigated roofing material beneath the cages- acts like gutters and supports the pots. Outdoors I build rustic table frames that look like ladders with rungs that go in pairs instead of singly. Each pair of rungs is spaced so they support one pot.