Re: Switching from live to frozen/thawed. How?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Manasha-Bogo
No idea what cervical displacement is... but what I did was I put the mouse into a zip lock bag. I waited thinking it would just suffocate, but it didn't. So I took my tongs and pressed the mouse down so it couldn't breath in. The tongs were wide enough to extend from rear legs to front legs. It was dead literally within 4 seconds.
Please do a simple frickin' Google search for cervical displacement.
As for your method, I've literally been sitting in front of my screen for the last 5 mins trying to type a response. Words just fail me, but, don't do that anymore :mad:
Re: Switching from live to frozen/thawed. How?
Quote:
Instructions
1. Grasp the mouse firmly by the tail with one hand. You should only do this with mice that are more than three or four weeks of age: If they're any younger, you might pull the tail off.
2. Pinch the base of the mouse's head between the thumb and forefinger of your other hand.
3. Pull each end of the mouse in opposite directions.
4. Listen for the crack and snap that indicates the mouse's neck has been broken. The mouse will probably go very still. Its legs may twitch reflexively, but this is just a nerve reflex. The mouse is already dead.
Read more: How to Kill Mice for Snake Food | eHow.com
http://www.ehow.com/how_5037730_kill...#ixzz1uoZvEJBS
Ugh... Honestly, I don't know if I can do this.... I think I will just buy frozen and hope for the best.
Re: Switching from live to frozen/thawed. How?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bobbafett
How is cervical dislocation any worse than forcing tongs on it so it can't breathe
I knew someone would ask. And here's my answer. Keeping in mind that I'm talking about my personal feelings on the matter, I'm not stating anything as a "fact" or anything else.
Using tongs to push down on a mouse so that it could not take a breath is like mimicking how it would have died if I had dropped him in the bin with my bp. He would have been bitten and the snake would have wrapped itself around it, constricting it, until it could not breath. Then it would suffocate to death. The mouse I killed suffocated. Same thing. I didn't have to touch the mouse, I didn't have to feel it's dying body in my hands.
Breaking its neck, on the other hand, requires that I hold it. In or out of a bag; with or without gloves on, I'm still touching it and I'm still able to feel it struggling against my grip. Then to snap its neck and "pull the head and rear in opposite directions" until I hear a snap, is a totally different story for me. That's a bit more intimate of a kill and I don't think I could do it without becoming very anxious about it. So you see for me they are very different.
I'm not saying you should agree and I'm not saying any of the above is true for everyone or that everyone sees it the same way. This is just how I feel about it.