BP resting with his head up
I received my Piebald a month ago and he has yet to eat. I have tried live and frozen thawed both mice and rats. He acts interested in the mouse and closes in on them but he doesn't strike. Instead he turns around and goes to the opposite end of the enclosure. He rests with his head either elevated or against the side of the cage pointing straight up. I took him to the vet and she checked the inside of his mouth, and listened to his breathing and said that he was fine. He doesn't have any mucus coming from his mouth nor does he wheeze. Could it be possible that he just rests with his head straight up because he is comfortable? And I am attributing the fact that he hasn't eaten to the shipment and new surroundings where he is going from being kept in a rack to an larger enclosure. He is a year and a half and 900 grams by the way. Thanks for the help!
Re: BP resting with his head up
I am trying to attach a picture but I don't see an attachment option on the reply tab. I have a 37 gallon wooden enclosure. I am using Aspen snake bedding for substrate and heating it with a heat lamp and UTH. The hot side is 88-93 and the cool side is 80-83. Humidity is from 40-50. The picture that I have is perfect because it shows him laying with his head tilted up.
Re: BP resting with his head up
Yes the UTH does have a thermostat. And as far as him being in his hide; He doesn't go in his hide as often as he sleeps in between the wall of the enclosure and the hide box itself. He does cruise the cage in the mornings. Obviously he cruises at night but recently he has stated roaming during the mornings. He stays on his cool side a lot more than his hot side. I thought of adding another hide but he rarely uses the one he has. I really appreciate the help and advice also!
Re: BP resting with his head up
I got the hide from PETCO. It is a large mouse box. I will try to get him a smaller one tomorrow since he likes to be jammed in between the 2.
Re: BP resting with his head up
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jamie334
He doesn't go in his hide as often as he sleeps in between the wall of the enclosure and the hide box itself.
I've seen this behavior before, and believe it or not, it's actually a sign of stess.
My bet is that if you put him in a smaller enclosure like a 28 qt tub with a couple of hides, give him a week to de-stress, and offer him a rat, he'd hit it like a ton of bricks.
At the very least, take a bunch of crumpled up news paper and fill up all that extra space in your 37 gallon.
I'd be willing to bet a doughnut that he's not eating because he feels exposed...I know you're probably thinking that if he feels exposed he wouldn't be laying between the glass and the hide, but rather inside of it. Truth is, BPs can be funny that way.