Baby Sulcata Tortoise
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- We expect new babies in June 2026.
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Common Name: Sulcata or "Spur-Thigh" Tortoise
Scientific Name: Centrochelys Sulcata
Current Size: 2" +/-
Average Adult Size: 22-32" (males larger)
Area of Origin: North/Central Africa
Description: Sandy beige color almost throughout their body, head and legs. Some will develop a darker "honey" color. Aggressive spikes on their front legs help them to dig and prevent being pulled out of their burrows backwards (which is nearly impossible to do). The "spurs" on their rear thighs between the tail and legs give them their "spur-thigh tortoise" name.
Wild Habitat: Hot, dry climates. They can handle variable amounts of humidity in captivity, but naturally are from lower humidity areas. They do not brumate/hibernate, but will go through a winter slow down period during cooler weather and shortened daylengths. As adults, they can safely handle body temperatures as low as 50 degrees at night as long as they are able to heat up into the 70's during the day. Summer highs up to 120 degrees can be tolerated as long as there is a cooler, shaded retreat the tortoise can get into. Dampness is not a problem in high temperatures (a cool mud hole on a hot day), but in cooler weather the tortoises should be kept dry. As babies, these tortoises spend almost all their time in washes and underground in burrows, giving them a more humid and moist environment than you picture the Sahara desert to be. Because of the dry climate and low calorie natural diet, their growth rates in the wild are significantly slower than they are in captivity.
Diet: This tortoise is naturally a grazer, and will wander about nibbling on grass the majority of its natural life. In captivity, larger sulcata tortoises will graze on grasses as well as leafy weeds and clover (dandelions are a favorite). As babies, we focus more on feeding them a mix of leafy greens and weeds, since they have a harder time eating the more tough grass.
Adult Behavior: Adult sulcata tortoises are interactive and curious tortoises. They can be aggressive towards each other, particularly when two similar-sized adult males are housed together. Over time (and with careful watching by the owner), they usually develop a hierarchy and smaller males will assume a submissive role. Individuals that have been housed alone as adults for some amount of time will rarely be cooperative when added back to a group. Our adults that have always been housed in groups, have no problems living together in mixed-sex groups. They can be rough on their environment, digging deep burrows to stay warm or cool if no shelter is provided. Most sulcatas will eagerly come to their keepers looking for food once they are comfortable in their environments. They can get impatient in small areas, so this is not a tortoise for the keeper looking for something that doesn't need space. When an enclosure is properly built for the tortoise, they are very enjoyable animals to keep, particularly in a warmer, Southern climate. This isn't a good tortoise choice for a colder climate. Perimeter fences should be buried at least 12-24" underground, and sidewalls 16-24" above ground will normally contain them. Constant attempts to escape can sometimes be corrected by enlarging the enclosure and adding visual barriers within it (logs, boulders, more plants, etc).
Our Current Care: During cooler weather or indoors, these tortoises are kept indoors on a damp coco coir substrate with a hide box or two that they can get into to feel secure and have a more humid hiding area option which is critical for smooth shell growth. We house them in cheap, simple plastic tubs that can be purchased at WalMart or Target, generally 3 to 4 square feet in size for babies, and larger enclosures like stock tanks for juveniles. Low sides work best as excess heat can escape and makes viewing and access much easier. We prefer not to use sand as a substrate as it sticks to the food offerings and gets inadvertently eaten and can accumulate in the gut (in the wild, sand/dirt is generally hard packed and the food is generally dry, and is up off the surface, so it doesn't get eaten much in the wild). Temperatures in the room fluctuates between 70 at night up to 80 during the day in the summer months, with a heat light/heat source overhead bringing a small area (10%) of the enclosure up to about 95 degrees as an option that they can get in and out of as needed. This species, as babies, at night we prefer to keep a small heat source maintaining a temperature around 80 degrees at night. This can be done with a small wattage ceramic heat emitter, heat panel, red bulb or a heat mat placed against the back or side wall of the enclosure to add some warmth at night. During the day, we have a UVB source overhead (generally a linear tube ZooMed Reptisun 10.0 bulb), and larger enclosures will use 80-100W mercury vapor bulbs instead.
The diet we offer almost all our tortoises consists of mixed leafy greens, and our primary list includes dandelion, endive/escarole, turnip greens, collared greens, dark leaf lettuces (green/red), mulberry leaves, grape leaves, plantain, cactus pads, and mallow. We will typically take 4-6 of these items at a time as available and chop it small to prevent the tortoises from being able to avoid any one or two items (sort of forces them to get a little of everything). We top this with a handful of our Herbal Hay. About twice a week we will add calcium or calcium/D3 supplement, twice a week add our Food Fixer supplement, and once a week will add a general reptile/herbivore multivitamin like Repashy Superveggie to the food (these are all powder form). Shake well to distribute, and this is what's fed to all the indoor (generally baby and juvenile) tortoises. Commercial pellets can be dampened to soften them and mixed in as well, and effort should be made to include this occasionally so that they are used to eating it, which helps in a pinch to feed on a day or two where you don't have fresh greens available. Vegetables can be added to the diet for variety, but fruit should generally be avoided as it can disturb their digestive process when they get the influx of sugar.
The tortoises are removed from their enclosure and soaked in a separate 1/4" deep pan of warm water daily or almost daily for 30 minutes each time. We don't generally use water dishes in the enclosures because of the risk of drowning (yes, we have lost babies to drowning when they flipped over in 1/4" of water).
We don't use the "closed chamber" method that has become popular in some groups and forums (keeping them very high humidity and very warm). This speeds up their growth rate but isn't natural in any way, and has significant respiratory risks if temperatures drop (at all), and shell rot and mold are a lot more common. A wild tortoise of any species we keep would never see these conditions more than a few hours at a time in the wild during a summer rainstorm. We keep them with open tops, warmer and cooler areas to go between, with a 'more' humid hide available to use as they want to. They are free to choose the conditions, temperatures, and humidity levels they want within this setup.
49 Reviews Hide Reviews Show Reviews
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Thank you so much!
We recieved our baby Sulcata yesterday and he is the most active, fun little guy I have ever seen. My son was so happy he cried! Thank you for making my son's birthday one of the best he has had! I will diffently tell my friends about your website! Thanks agian!
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soooooo exited to get a new freind.
i would like to get one sooooo bad. there at a really good price my other turtles cost about 200. i just cant wait to get one but i have to save up money. im so exited.yaaaaaaaaa!
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gettin one!
im trying to decide what kind of tortoise to get. a sulcata is my first choice cant wait! im surprised that hes only 75, usualy see them for 150 so great deal!
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MY NEW BEST FRIEND
i was so excited for my lil sulcata to arive in the mail but once he came he was very healthy, a little tired but i expected that. he was so much smaller than i thought he would actually be! If anyone wants a tortoie this is one of the best
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Best pet ever
I got a sulcata tortoise and it is the best pet I have ever had. His name is spike he is active and eats like he hasn't eat'n in weeks I lov him
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there so cute
i am going to get one very soon for me and my mom they adorable and here there very active antd entertaing to watch so i cant wait thanks a lot you guys and reivers u have inspired me to get 2
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waiting to get one
icant wait to get one from the rest of the reviews i here thier awesome cant wait
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Very Cute
I got my Baby sulcata on tuesday and its doing great very active i will be getting some more baby tortoises soon from u guys thanks alot
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Great
I got my sulcata on time as planned and the color i ordered (darker). After a soak he was very alert and active, Five star service and Will be coming back here for all my tortoises needs THANKS FOR THE GREAT FRIEND!!
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amazing
I got my sulcata from here in december and he has been it absolute perfect health and very active and very playful. Thanks for the amazing friend guys!
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Excellent Tortoise
I had a baby sulcata shipped to Wyoming, these guys were excellent to deal with and my tortoise was in excellent health when I got him. Top notch customer service. Thanks again!
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Wonderful babies
My 2 sulcata arrived last week, the babies are sweet,and were eating within an hour after delivery. Thank you!