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  1. #1
    Registered User rigomez4's Avatar
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    Should I breed her?

    I was looking to get peoples opinion on this.

    I purchased an adult pewter female at the end of June. She weighed 1882 grams. She has not eaten since I got her and is now 1430 grams. I read where someone said they breed their females regardless of if they are eating or not. They said it can stimulate some non-feeders to start feeding.

    My question is can I/ should I breed her this year or wait until she starts to feed again before trying?

    Your opinions are greatly appreciated.

  2. #2
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    Re: Should I breed her?

    I'm sure you already know this, but sometimes they go off food for breeding season.... June is a little early to go off, probably, but you get the idea.

    If it were me, just for my own piece of mind, I'd want her to eat something before breeding.

    Most folks say 1200 grams is OK though, so I wouldn't worry too much, unless you're like me and you already know you're gonna' stress.
    -Brock-
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  3. #3
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    1500 is safer, I'd wait until she's stable before risking it. 'Cause if the cause is that she's stressed out, then why risk the snake?

    If you want permission, then go ahead.

  4. #4
    BPnet Veteran Rat160's Avatar
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    Re: Should I breed her?

    Im pretty much sticking to 1500g before i breed, but in your case I would just wait. I woldnt breed a female that wasnt eating for me after purchasing her. Take the risk of breeding her and something going wrong, or just wait and have piece of mind and hopefully she starts eating.. Just my .02
    Last edited by Rat160; 10-09-2012 at 03:11 PM.


    150 AND COUNTING...


  5. #5
    BPnet Lifer snakesRkewl's Avatar
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    1500 is safer, I'd wait until she's stable before risking it.
    So gaining 70 grams makes it safe to breed a female that's lost 400+ grams?
    That makes no sense, sorry.

    I absolutely would not waste my time breeding a female that's lost 400 grams, unless I wanted some pretty slugs to play with...
    My advise is to get her eating and gaining weight before thinking of breeding her
    Last edited by snakesRkewl; 10-09-2012 at 03:22 PM.
    Jerry Robertson

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    BPnet Senior Member Don's Avatar
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    You've had her for around three months and she seems to have lost over 450 grams. It sounds like something is not right. Hopefully, you have quarantined her. If my facts are correct, I would not breed her until I figured out what is going on with her.

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  9. #7
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    Re: Should I breed her?

    Quote Originally Posted by snakesRkewl View Post
    So gaining 70 grams makes it safe to breed a female that's lost 400+ grams?
    That makes no sense, sorry.

    I absolutely would not waste my time breeding a female that's lost 400 grams, unless I wanted some pretty slugs to play with...
    My advise is to get her eating and gaining weight before thinking of breeding her
    Fangs much?

    Read the rest of the post. And no matter what I do I can't force someone not to breed based on my own judgment.

  10. #8
    BPnet Veteran rafacacho's Avatar
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    It depends on each animal. For example, I bred a 1400g female that´s all muscle and is young, but I have another female that´s been with me for 4 months only, she was weighting 1400g but was way underweight, she has the same head and length as a 3500g female. She´s now 2000g but you can tell she´s still underweight, so she probably has few or none fat reserves that are necessary for breeding. I´m not breeding her until next year. Losing 400g IMO is a lot, she´s supossed to start eating when growing follicles, maybe you can wait a little.

  11. #9
    BPnet Veteran MisterKyte's Avatar
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    It's very important to realize that when it comes to weight, it's always relative to the size of the snake you plan on breeding! For example, I have a female normal who weighs in at about 2200 grams, she's not fat and she not the thin, the weight just looks right for her size. Now if she suddenly lost 400 grams, she'd still be considered breedable on paper yet in reality she'd actually be underweight which might cause some worry and prompt me not to breed her. So, when you are deciding to breed this female, take into account weather or not her weight looks good for her size, I've had snakes not feeding and dropping weight on me in the past simply because they're overweight and if that was the case, it'd probably be okay to breed her (just making sure she had a little bit of food to go off of before you did so would probably be a good idea though!) but if she's been losing tons of weight and looks thin it would be best to work her up to her previous weight first.

    If you could post a current picture of her it would probably help people determine if she looks good to go or weather or not you may want to consider checking into a vet's office!

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  13. #10
    Registered User rigomez4's Avatar
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    Thanks for the replies. I re-weighed her and she is at 1707 grams (complete user failure with the scale). She has shed twice since I got her (most recent 10/4). Not sure if that changes any opinions.

    Here is a picture of her about a month again. I can post more recent pictures later tonight.
    http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fb...size=960%2C720

    I greatly appreciate your opinions.

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