Appropriate size/health determination
I know for cornsnakes the spine is used as a reference to determine if a snake is underfed (pronounced spine) or fat (muffin shape). Is this applicable to BPs? If so what are the features, if not, how can I assess my BP? There seems to be so much inter-individual variability that weight would not be sufficient.
Re: Appropriate size/health determination
What do you mean by gushy body tone?
When googling ball python images, it seems like half of the first images that come up have a visible spine, am I assessing that correctly?
Re: Appropriate size/health determination
Craig is explaining this better than me. Protruding spine would be a better definition. Gushy body tone means either hanging skin or you can feel something other than solid muscle(too fat).
This is a baby right after its first shed and different rules apply but outside of a hatchling you would not want to see this body shape. This particular animal is a fat pig at a year old.
https://ball-pythons.net/gallery/fil.../1700505_2.jpg
Here is a month old female, the way I like to see them. A boy should be thinner with more defined musculature along the back.
https://ball-pythons.net/gallery/fil...1/img_1081.jpg
Re: Appropriate size/health determination
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Blitzjg
Very helpful guys thank you.
In that pic of the baby you are saying that's how an underfed/skinny adult would look?
If that was an adult with that body shape in would be near death. It is an extreme. The female below, if she was an adult, would be close to diet time. Everything has variation though. The bottom female comes from one of my large lines. They plump then grow. She is 1500 grams at a year on the same feeding schedule as everyone else. That line just grows quicker so they move up prey sizes quicker.
Re: Appropriate size/health determination
here's a beep that's a bit fat lol (she's slimmed down now)
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...a26eb1fd25.jpg