Re: What are we doing wrong?
Maybe try another source for frozen feeders. I know belly-bursting can happen on occasion, but I've never heard of it happening with every feed. Mice that have been thawed and re-frozen are definitely more prone to bursting, so it could be you need a new supplier with better quality control.
Re: What are we doing wrong?
When I first started feeding F/T I used the same hot water method and also experienced a higher rate of exploding preys :puke2:, since than I have change the way to thaw the preys no longer experience this kind of problem.
Here is what I do, I let the prey thaw at room temp (this also help entice the snake to eat) once thawed, I warm it up with a hair dryer, works great and no more exploding rodents.
Re: What are we doing wrong?
If you've determined it isn't a problem with the rodent quality...
Defrost in lukewarm/room temp water for a longer period of time, then heat your rodent(s) up with significantly (but not HOT hot) warmer water just prior to feeding off.
Re: What are we doing wrong?
Thanks for the replies. You guys sure are fast! I'll try a slower method of defrosting next week and see if that makes a difference.
Re: What are we doing wrong?
I use hot tap water, not heated. Never had a belly explode once in hundreds, maybe thousands of feedings.
Re: What are we doing wrong?
I take my rats out in the morning of the day I am going to feed my snakes , let them thaw out over the day naturally while at work or out doing some jolly family business :), before feeding, I give a quick blast of a hair dryer on the head of the rat as thats where I want the interest and strike to happen and have never had any problems in too many years to mention.
Burst rats I have only ever seen due to over heating or heating too fast or as mentioned using a re-frozen thawed rat.
just my 2 cents
Re: What are we doing wrong?
I fill a bucket with hot water from the tap and throw the rats in. In about thirty minutes I dump the water, refill with hot water to get them nice and warm, and then feed. Most of my snakes will take a wet rat, and the rat is hotter than my hand so I don't need forceps. Never had a rat burst.
Re: What are we doing wrong?
I use frozen with my boa and hognose. With the rabbits that are 2lbs or so, I let them sit in the fridge for 2 days to thaw and then stick them in the bathtub until they are warmed through(this may take 30 minutes or so depending on how frozen the rabbit is still). If I had rats for her, I would take out however many I needed, stick them in the fridge(in the sealed bags) and leave them for the day or 24 hours, and then stick them in a large pot filled with warm water for 25-30 minutes to make sure nothing is left frozen. The pot I use has a big convex glass lid, so I just flip it upside down so the rats are fully submerged.
With the hognose's large fuzzy/small hopper mice, I put them in a sealed baggie, put some lukewarm water in a cup in the sink, stick the mouse in, and put another water-filled cup on top of that so everything is submerged. After it has thawed, I run some hot tap water over it until it has been warmed all the way through, and then feed the snake.
When I was feeding my one Ball Python(Amani, when I had only one) frozen mice, if they heated up too quickly or stayed too hot for too long, the belly would burst.
If I had to do that with the 40 Ball Pythons, I would be feeding for 6+ hours, LOL.
Re: What are we doing wrong?
I was going to suggest the fridge thawing method as well. I thaw the occasional frozen rat for my BCI this way.. like you would thaw a steak or chicken leg for yourself..