Ribbon Snakes for a young/beginner herp
Is there any general advice or wisdom you can share for a young herp enthusiast about to get his first Ribbon Snake?
Ribbon Snakes for a young/beginner herp
Will it be your first snake? If so, my advice is this: don't get one! They are usually wild caught and riddled with parasites (this is why they are cheap), and have tricky diet requirements unless you can convert them to mice. Oh and did I mention that they don't take well to handling. Get a cornsnake! Similarly sized as adults, but easy to find captive bred and eating frozen-thawed. They come in a host of cheap yet stunning morphs, and are great to handle. Best of luck, and feel free to ask me any questions you may have.
Re: Ribbon Snakes for a young/beginner herp
yes this will be my first snake thanks for the advice but do you know any tips on how to take care of one?
Re: Ribbon Snakes for a young/beginner herp
are eastern ribbon snakes as bad or are all of them bad pets???
Re: Ribbon Snakes for a young/beginner herp
Thanks for the advice, I am getting a young snake so that I can tame it
Re: Ribbon Snakes for a young/beginner herp
Thank you for your advice. Is it difficult to convert them to mice eaters?
I really wanted to get a Ribbon Snake but if they are difficult to handle and feed, I'll have to consider some other options.
Thanks!
Re: Ribbon Snakes for a young/beginner herp
A ribbon snake is a rotten choice for a first pet snake.
Or a second pet snake.
Or a third pet snake.
Some fairly bulletproof and budget wise first snakes are:
1. Spotted pythons
2. Children's pythons
3. Corn snakes
4. Gopher snakes
5. Milk snakes
6. King snakes
and if you can find them:
7. Russian rat snakes.