Tortoise Care Guide: How to Keep Your Tortoise Healthy for a Lifetime

Tortoise Care Guide: How to Keep Your Tortoise Healthy for a Lifetime

Tortoises are among the most ancient and fascinating animals on Earth — and with proper care, they can outlive their owners, living 50 to 100+ years. Whether you're keeping a small Russian tortoise or a giant sulcata, these gentle herbivores reward patient, dedicated keepers with decades of companionship. Here's your complete guide!

🏠 Choosing the Right Species

Species selection is critical — size and climate requirements vary enormously:

  • Russian Tortoise: Small (6–10"), cold-tolerant, great for beginners
  • Hermann's Tortoise: Medium (6–12"), Mediterranean climate, very popular
  • Greek/Spur-thighed Tortoise: Medium (8–12"), similar to Hermann's
  • Sulcata (African Spurred) Tortoise: Very large (24–30"+), requires outdoor space as adults
  • Red-footed Tortoise: Medium (10–16"), tropical, needs higher humidity

🏠 Setting Up the Enclosure

Tortoises need space to roam — the bigger the better:

  • Indoor tortoise table: Minimum 4' x 2' for small species; open-top preferred for airflow
  • Outdoor enclosure: Ideal for warmer months — secure walls at least 18" high and buried 12" underground to prevent escape
  • Basking spot: 95–105°F; ambient 75–85°F; cool retreat 65–75°F
  • UVB lighting: High-output 10.0 UVB — essential for calcium metabolism
  • Substrate: 4–6" of topsoil/coconut coir mix for burrowing
  • Humidity: Varies by species — Mediterranean species prefer 30–50%; tropical species 60–80%

🌿 Nutrition & Feeding

Tortoises are strict herbivores — high fiber, low protein, low fruit:

  • Grasses & hay (50–60%): Timothy hay, orchard grass, and fresh lawn grasses
  • Leafy greens (30–40%): Dandelion greens, collard greens, endive, and hibiscus leaves
  • Vegetables (10%): Squash, bell peppers, and cactus pads
  • Fruit (5% or less): Occasional treat only — too much sugar causes digestive issues
  • Avoid: Animal protein, spinach in large amounts, and high-oxalate foods

Dust food with calcium powder 3–5 times per week. Provide a shallow water dish for soaking — tortoises drink and defecate in water, so change it daily.

🛁 Grooming & Hygiene

  • Soak in warm shallow water 2–3 times per week — aids hydration and digestion
  • Check shell regularly for pyramiding (sign of improper humidity or diet) or shell rot
  • Trim beak and nails if overgrown — consult your vet
  • Clean enclosure weekly; deep clean monthly

💊 Health & Wellness

Common health issues include respiratory infections, shell rot, parasites, and metabolic bone disease. Tortoises are masters at hiding illness — annual vet check-ups with a reptile-experienced veterinarian are essential. Hibernation (brumation) is natural for many Mediterranean species — research your specific species' requirements carefully.

Explore our Tortoise Collection for all the premium supplies your ancient companion needs to thrive for a lifetime! 🐢

Back to blog