Successful first feeding!
Fed Sammy tonight, and he was quite enthusiastic. Man, they strike fast! He carried it back into his hide, and we turned out the lights and left the room.
Later, I went in to check on him with a flashlight, and he was out of his hide, kind of wrapped around the mouse, and swallowing it head-first. Again, I left.
When we went back in half an hour or so later, he was in his hide again, no sign of the mouse.
He ate it, right? We couldn't see anything we were sure was a lump in his body--wouldn't there be a small bulge? But then, he was curled in his hide, so we could really only see his neck anyway. *Can* you tell just from looking at the snake, provided the prey is the right size (i.e., the same width as the widest part of the snake's head)?
So, anyway, hurray! Successful first feeding (we think).
Something funny happened when we first put the mouse in. Our two young sons wanted to watch, so we stood them on a stool by his cage while Carey lowered the mouse in with tongs. Apparently, the multitude of heat signatures confused Sammy and he struck at our youngest son through the tub. Quite startling! LOL Poor Sammy got his nose bumped by the plastic side of the cage, and we got a glimpse of just how much you *don't* want a snake to think you're a mouse--yikes!
Anyway, thought ya'll might like to know Sammy's settled in and eating. In a couple days we'll take him out and handle him. Hurrah!
Heather
Re: Successful first feeding!
Quote:
Originally Posted by heatherhead42
He ate it, right? We couldn't see anything we were sure was a lump in his body--wouldn't there be a small bulge? But then, he was curled in his hide, so we could really only see his neck anyway. *Can* you tell just from looking at the snake, provided the prey is the right size (i.e., the same width as the widest part of the snake's head)?
Heather
Well congratulations
Ideally you want to feed your BP once a week a prey that is slightly smaller then the girth size (Widest part of your BP's body). This will allow you to have a BP that feed with consistency.
Re: Successful first feeding!
Re: Successful first feeding!
Congrats
I guess I got pretty lucky. I got my new little girl on a Saturday, and she pounded a mouse the very next day with out any problems.
The one thing I did that I think helped a lot was I transported her, and kept her in the exact same tub that the breeder kept her in. I'm sure this was a big part in easing the move.
She was eating live before, and with no hesitation has now pounded 2 fresh killed mice 5 days apart (they aren't very big here).