Cleaning Branches?

ChameleonAlley

New Member
I was wondering if any of you all had any suggestions for cleaning branches? I've got some in the oven right now, but I've got a large one that won't fit in the oven. Any suggestions on how to clean it before I can put it in the cage? Thanks all. :)
 
Peal off all bark and soak in a 1:10 Bleach:water solution and rinse really well in really hot water. Let it dry and rinse it again (and dry) to make sure all bleach is out.
 
Thank you soo much! When you say take off all the bark, is this because they could gnaw on it? Do I need to make sure it's really stripped? Thanks again Pssh. You rock!
 
i got some branches from a brush that caught fire. the branch structure was awesome. i took them to work and wire wheeled the bark off of them. sandblasted them. and then i soaked in bleach solution, rinsed, and let dry and they are amazing in my cage.
 
It can be eaten and choked on. It can also fall of and get eaten on accident. Also, make sure they're dead, sap can be very dangerous.
 
dont quote me on this but i think its because the bark can contain sap and it can be poisionous to your animal....
 
I use branches from safe trees all the time.
I collect them and put them in the cages ... no soaking, washing, stripping bark, baking etc.
I just use them the way I find them.
If you collect near a busy street, in a highly polluted area or in a park off the ground where a dog may have peed on them, I would wash them off.

-Brad
 
hhmm be careful with just taking the branches and throwing them in a cage, they could have mites and tics on them. Obviously, a good inspection of the branches should show whether or not there are tics on them, but mites may be a little more difficult to spot.

I'm curious, I have vines that I took down a few weeks ago, they are some kind of wild vine and they look exactly like the imitation vines... i'll find a picture... and it has a thin layer of bark on it, do I still need to remove it?

 
I use branches from safe trees all the time.
I collect them and put them in the cages ... no soaking, washing, stripping bark, baking etc.
I just use them the way I find them.
If you collect near a busy street, in a highly polluted area or in a park off the ground where a dog may have peed on them, I would wash them off.

-Brad

I do the same, you just need to use common sense.
 
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