Dealing With Winter Fasting
Whats the best protocol to deal with winter fasting?
My male bp is about 950 grams and is almost two years old (and three feet n change) and as of three weeks ago he quit eating (he began to slow down a bit the week before that and went a few days longer than normal before he got hungry and ate).
He was treated for mild scale rot with baytril injections and disinfectant wipes (plus polysporin with no lidocaine) for 10 days, during which we offered food on schedule but he obviously refused it---a week after the course of the injections were done we offered food again, and then yesterday I offered more food. No luck.
His scales are looking much better, but obviously a shed is in order to get him back to 100%.
His temps are 95 on his heat mat and an ambient/cool side temp of 77-82 (depending on exact location) and about %50 humidity (was much higher but in rigging the heat lamp obviously the tub is drier). Since adding in the infared lamp he's very active and curious and drinks water regularly.
He just doesn't want to eat.
Should I keep offering him food or just leave him be 'till spring?
Re: Dealing With Winter Fasting
Generally, I offer food every other week with snakes that are clearly fasting for winter, and at the height of the season I might just skip an entire month if the snakes are all breeding.
With yours, it may just be stressed from the treatments. If I were in your shoes, I'd keep offering food weekly for another month, and if he is still refusing each week, then skip to every other (or even every 3rd) until he does start eating.
-Jen