Vote for BP.Net for the 2013 Forum of the Year! Click here for more info.

» Site Navigation

» Home
 > FAQ

» Online Users: 1,114

0 members and 1,114 guests
No Members online
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.

» Today's Birthdays

None

» Stats

Members: 75,917
Threads: 249,118
Posts: 2,572,203
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, Necbov
  • 07-13-2013, 12:02 AM
    rascal_rascal_99
    Sand boas are awesome tough little snakes. No special humidity requirements although a humidity hide during shedding helps sometimes. They need a hot spot but the temp for it can vary a pretty good bit and they can still thrive...over the years I've had them anywhere from about 85-105 for their hot spot and they always did great (keep in mind this is going back to early 90's era and that was a totally different world back then)...now I shoot for about 90f. Males do have a tendancy to go off of feeding during the winter months sometimes, although most of mine will stay feeding better on rat pinks during this time.

    Charlie
  • 07-13-2013, 05:03 PM
    artgecko
    Thanks again for the great replies and info!
    M&H- Maybe I'll end up like you with one of each... I still really love the hognose and think for what we're looking for (more of an active snake) it would still be the best bet. But every time I look at the KSB I want one more and more. I really love the anerys... We'll see. Maybe I'll end up taking home one of each from the show.

    If I do not hear back from the breeder I'm in contact with about the hognose, I may wait and look at both at the show and go with the snake that appeals to me the most.

    Artgecko
  • 07-13-2013, 06:11 PM
    Evildrdee
    I have one little guy, a Nuclear KSB. Hes fiesty. Snagged me once good! Eats like a pig on FT pinks. I only ever see his head. He is cute though, watches me with his little orange eyes. I have him in an Exo Terra in my bedroom. Hes most active in the early morning trolling his cage. Will get him a lady one day.
  • 08-04-2013, 10:23 PM
    rasslinrinyu
    I used to have one. I never saw mine much. Every now and then he would poke his head up and look around but very inactive. I hate to say I really did feel like I owned pet sand. When I took him out though he was very cute. Their faces remind me of muppets lol.
  • 08-14-2013, 10:26 AM
    Autumn2005
    I have 3.... err, 11 of these guys (just had 8 babies yesterday!:D) and I love them. I have a mature normal breeding pair (obviously) and a sub-adult anery female. My male is very laid back, but he is an escape artist! He's gotten out three times now, when I've forgotten to put the lock back in the cage, but I always find him because they're relatively largish, slow moving snakes. Unlike, say that baby kingsnake that escaped through a ventilation hole and we've never seen again. He does go off his feed sometimes, but I heard they'll do that in the breeding season. I've had him since he was a baby. He will eat anything from hoppers to small adults.

    My mature female is a little twitchy. She doesn't strike, but she does a full body jerk when I'm trying to pick her up sometimes. She tends to do it more when she's hungry. She's also more picky in her food. She prefers anything with fur, hoppers and smaller. She won't eat anything larger than 3/4 of her body circumference. I got her as a mature adult.

    My little anery female I also got as a baby, and she'll eat anything from rat pups to small mice hoppers. She's a champ for trying food that I think might be a little big for her. She's not as calm as my male, but she's not as twitchy as my first female. I have them on aspen, not sand, and I see them on occasion.

    And the babies are, well, babies! So far they haven't been twitchy or nippy with me. There were 9, but one came out with a bad spine kink, so I took care of it.

    I was taking the adults out to feed yesterday when I saw the female was eating a round pinkish thing. I had a moment of panic wondering what she got into, and then thought it was probably an infertile egg. My sinaloan milk snake recently laid a clutch of slugs, so I wasn't as anxious as I could have been. Anyway, with one snake out of the cage and one snake still in the cage, I was quite shocked and alarmed to see movement in two distinct places in the cage. I looked, and saw a wee tiny head poking out. I may have shrieked and done a happy dance, but I admit nothing :D. Anyway, I sorted through the litter and found the babies! I wasn't expecting babies because the male and female had been together for nearly a year with no results, so I figured they didn't like each other, and I wasn't worried about it. The female didn't look gravid to me. It was only in the last week that I vaguely thought she looked bigger than normal. She wasn't at all like the pictures I've seen of very bloated, gravid KSBs.

    Anyway, I'm now in love with theses little babies! Both parents, though normals, were selected for their bright orange color, and the babies are already brighter today than yesterday! I might keep one for myself!;)
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v4.2.1