» Site Navigation
2 members and 1,677 guests
Most users ever online was 9,191, 03-09-2025 at 12:17 PM.
» Today's Birthdays
» Stats
Members: 75,868
Threads: 249,064
Posts: 2,571,954
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, elizard
|
-
I have the longest species. Smallest?
So I have been thinking. I have reticulated pythons which are the longest species in the pet trade. I started thinking about getting the smallest species that does well in the pet trade for my education program. I think would be cool to show the contrast. With 2 payments to go on Aurora I am getting excited to see her and get her settled in.
I was looking at ring neck snakes. The only issue is they don't thrive in captivity from what I have read online. What are some good smallest species to work with. Not in a hurry at all and will be June or July before I seriously start my search. I love the look of hognoses but don't want anything venomous (even rear fanged) in my collection.
At this point I have BRB, Dwarf Boa, RTB, 2 Ball pythons, King snake, corn snake, and 3 reticulated pythons.
-
-
Ringneck snakes make awful pets. They're native to my home state and I don't think I've ever seen them bred in Captivity. One of my favorites to find in the wild.
Maybe a Kenyan Sand Boa? They max out under 2ft long and give you a STRONG comparison between large and small, but is still "large" enough to be handled by kids in an Educational program.
2c.
Paul
-
-
Re: I have the longest species. Smallest?
 Originally Posted by pbenner
Ringneck snakes make awful pets. They're native to my home state and I don't think I've ever seen them bred in Captivity. One of my favorites to find in the wild.
Maybe a Kenyan Sand Boa? They max out under 2ft long and give you a STRONG comparison between large and small, but is still "large" enough to be handled by kids in an Educational program.
2c.
Paul
I do love the Kenyan Sand Boas. Was looking at them. Love that it is another boa as well. Great suggestion.
-
-
I always like finding ring neck snakes but as said, I've never seen them do well in captivity. There's an even smaller snake I find occasionally here, the Brahminy blind snake (flower pot snake). They are tiny so I don't know that you would want something that small but it would be worth looking into.
-
-
Re: I have the longest species. Smallest?
Anthill Python
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
- Summer
0.1 Bearded Dragon ("Reka")
0.1 California Kingsnake ("Cleo")
0.1 Cinnamon Spider Het. Albino Ball Python ("Syd")
1.0 Hypo Bredl’s Python (“Oz”)
-
-
Re: I have the longest species. Smallest?
 Originally Posted by SquirmyPug
I always like finding ring neck snakes but as said, I've never seen them do well in captivity. There's an even smaller snake I find occasionally here, the Brahminy blind snake (flower pot snake). They are tiny so I don't know that you would want something that small but it would be worth looking into.
I agree about the ring neck species being difficult to keep in captivity.
I did some reading about the Brahminy blind snake. They seam to be hard to get to thrive in captivity as well. From reading several articles, the average length of time people have been successful to keep them alive is 6 months to a year. Guessing a year is typical in the wild. Not off the list but still shopping.
Thank you for the suggestion.
-
-
Re: I have the longest species. Smallest?
 Originally Posted by alittleFREE
Anthill Python
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
This is a great suggestion. They live a long time and seam to do well in captivity. Will put up to vote on Monday.
Thanks for the suggestion.
-
-
Rubber boas seem to be quite small. No rear fangs there. Hard to find, but I did see them listed once on Kingsnake.com. Not sure how they do in captivity.
Also maybe the egg eating snake? doesn't even have teeth.
-
-
Re: I have the longest species. Smallest?
 Originally Posted by distaff
Rubber boas seem to be quite small. No rear fangs there. Hard to find, but I did see them listed once on Kingsnake.com. Not sure how they do in captivity.
Also maybe the egg eating snake? doesn't even have teeth.
Did some reading. They seam great as captive species goes. Acquiring one might be difficult. I am not afraid of waiting and searching. Will make the list if I can find one.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Skyrivers For This Useful Post:
-
Savu pythons are also tiny. What's interesting to me is that of all my pythons they act a lot like my retics, just in a 3-4 foot long pencil thin snake.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to bcr229 For This Useful Post:
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|