Frustrated with long time non-feeder
Hi all. I am beginning to lose hope with one of my BPs not feeding. She is a pastel het pied, around 700 grams, and hasnt eaten or shown any interest in food since November last year (7 months by my count).
My main concern is not just the non feeding, but the fact she just seems completely terrified every time I open her RUB or try to offer food. She generally hides under the newspaper and balls up/ makes every effort to try and get away from the slightest movement.
Food wise, she was eating large weaner rats happily enough until Nov 13th last year, then she stopped. I've tried f/t mice, live mice, live rats (the latter 2 just spooked her even more). I've moved her to a smaller RUB to see if that might help too, but so far no joy.
I've not had much luck feed wise with any of my BPs since moving house in Feb, though I'm sure my husbandry is all 100% so not sure why - I seem to throw away more f/t rats than they eat unfortunately... (Mainly with my girls around 1kg which seems to be a common theme?)
Now, I've given up on her ever getting up to breeding size this year, I just want her to be happy and healthy, so if anyone has any ideas or tricks I can use to stop her being afraid of her own shadow and in turn get her eating, I'd be eternally grateful! :please:
Re: Frustrated with long time non-feeder
You mentioned that she hides under her newspaper - does she have any hides in her tub? You could also consider switching her to aspen. Scared means something is wrong, and she isn't going to eat if she feels exposed. The move could very well have contributed to the issue. However, the 1000g (or 700g) "wall" isn't unusual for growing females, especially during that time of year. I hve a few that took a couple of months off and just started eating again in the past couple of weeks. Make sure she feels secure in her tub, monitor her weight, and just keep offering what she was taking before her winter fast.
Re: Frustrated with long time non-feeder
Try hamsters or gerbils. Asf's? She might get picky after but it might be all you can do...:(
Re: Frustrated with long time non-feeder
Id bet its the previously mentioned 700g wall. About half my females, no matter their prior feeding habit, simply stop eating around that time. As long as they arent loosing weight, all you can really do is wait it out.
Re: Frustrated with long time non-feeder
I have a male ghost that was a great eater on anything live prior to pairing him this year. Once breeding was over, he wouldn't go near anything, in fact he would go the other way. Tried f/t, but no luck.
One day decide to toss in a small live rat into his tub and turned off the lights that were directly over the rack he was in. Came back roughly 30 minutes later and rat was gone and he was coiled over the warm spot looking very content.
Give it a try, can't hurt.