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  • 02-09-2014, 11:11 PM
    J.P.
    i'm with the others about waiting for her to feed on her own. and once it does eat, offer food at longer intervals, it is tempting to take advantage of a positive feeding resonse and gain weight quickly by feeding often, but it will be easier on her digestive tract if you feed very seldom at first since her stomach is not used anymore to having a full load......one month interval between two first two feedings, then three weeks, and so on until you are down to regular weekly schedule.

    i do not know if this has scientific basis for snakes, but this is the advice i got from a vet when i adopted an adult male ball that was fed a small mouse every two months (previous owner thought snakes only needed to eat once a year, so he actually thought his twice a month schedule was more than ideal).....lucky for me its feeding response was terrific, but vet advised me to slow down on the feeding until the snake's stomach has adapted to more food.
  • 02-10-2014, 12:15 AM
    kylearmbar
    Re: Off food... assist feeding?
    I've been assist feeding a butter male for several months now, and let me tell you, it is not fun. In my case I have to because by the time I got him be was 43 grams, and I've been trying everything i can to get him to eat and he won't. Now through assist feeding he is now 75 grams. I would try live first if I was you.
  • 02-10-2014, 10:43 AM
    Phantomtip
    Re: Off food... assist feeding?
    Try feeding live to get her feeding response going. Also rat pinkies are way too small. It's like feeding a great dane a piece of lettuce. It's nothing to them. It might as well be part of the substrate. Feed a small small rat (like a 4 to 5 wk old). That will be considered prey. Just keep trying after she gets comfortable. Also if she just layed a clutch right before you got her you might want to give her a "bath". Let her soak I warm water then rub her with a washcloth. That way you get the egg smell off her. I wish you all the luck with her.
  • 02-10-2014, 06:41 PM
    glassslipper
    Re: Off food... assist feeding?
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Phantomtip View Post
    Try feeding live to get her feeding response going. Also rat pinkies are way too small. It's like feeding a great dane a piece of lettuce. It's nothing to them. It might as well be part of the substrate. Feed a small small rat (like a 4 to 5 wk old). That will be considered prey. Just keep trying after she gets comfortable. Also if she just layed a clutch right before you got her you might want to give her a "bath". Let her soak I warm water then rub her with a washcloth. That way you get the egg smell off her. I wish you all the luck with her.

    She laid late last summer and pretty much hadn't eaten since she laid I gather... I'll try the bath tip. Everything I have presented had been love because he did say she was picky before and only ate live. I guess this will be a great exercise in patience and good husbandry experience for me.

    Sent from my SCH-I535 using Tapatalk
  • 02-10-2014, 10:36 PM
    Slim
    Re: Off food... assist feeding?
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by J.P. View Post
    vet advised me to slow down on the feeding until the snake's stomach has adapted to more food.

    :crazy: Sounds like some voodoo magic pseudo veterinary medicine to me... Might be looking for a new vet if it were me.
  • 02-10-2014, 11:24 PM
    glassslipper
    UPDATE!!!!! Moved her to a smaller enclosure early this morning (from a 28qt to a 17qt). Acquired a gerbil, as no ASF's were to be found. I waited until bedtime, introduced the gerbil and left it while monitoring. after about 5 minutes of eyeballing it she sealed the deal. I certainly feel much better now that I have seen her eat. Thanks for all of the input!
  • 02-11-2014, 12:33 AM
    Slim
    WHY did you feed her a gerbil????? Don't know who gave you that nugget of wisdom, but they certainly did you no favors. A simple search on this Forum using the key word gerbil would have yielded several pages of good advice with regards to feeding gerbils. SMH
  • 02-11-2014, 09:22 AM
    glassslipper
    Re: Off food... assist feeding?
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Slim View Post
    WHY did you feed her a gerbil????? Don't know who gave you that nugget of wisdom, but they certainly did you no favors. A simple search on this Forum using the key word gerbil would have yielded several pages of good advice with regards to feeding gerbils. SMH

    I had two local breeders tell me to try ASF but if I couldn't find any to try a gerbil. Chad Gray was one of them. I took it as good advice as he is a very accomplished breeder. I take it this is a bad idea? I'll look into it more on the forum when I am home at the pc.

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  • 02-11-2014, 10:58 AM
    Slim
    Re: Off food... assist feeding?
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by glassslipper View Post
    I took it as good advice as he is a very accomplished breeder. I take it this is a bad idea? I'll look into it more on the forum when I am home at the pc.

    I'm not gonna' tell you it's a bad idea, but it sure isn't a great idea. Your snake is in no danger of starving to death at this time...not even close. Now you have very likely multiplied your problems.

    Being an accomplished breeder is in the eye of the beholder...Just because someone keeps and breeds snakes, it does not make them an expert (especially in the BP business where every 13 year old on YouTube is a breeder), and it does not mean they have experience with all aspects of BP husbandry. And, I throw myself under that same bus. Neither I, nor anyone else here is the Oracle. Learning to do your own research is the most important skill you will ever develop.

    Did your breeder friend tell you any of the following?

    BPs have a very bad habit of imprinting on gerbils once they've been given one. Sometimes they will NOT switch back to ANYTHING else. So here are the risk factors you bring on yourself when you feed gerbils:

    1) If your snake is now a gerbil crack addict (yes, it can happen after only one, just like heroine), you will need to feed it gerbils for the rest of ever. Not a problem you say? Cool. Not sure how much gerbils sell for in your neck of the cosmos, but in mine, feeding gerbils is a very expensive proposition.

    2) Gerbils can be aggressive and the adults have very sharp teeth. Even supervised feedings are more of a risk with gerbils.

    3) Lets say your snake, who has been on a fast, refuses to eat a rat next time...and the time after that...and the time after that. Now you've compounded your troubleshooting because now you don't know if it's just a continuation of her fast, or if she will now only eat gerbils. So she skips rats a few times, and you give in and go buy another gerbil...the cycle just gets worse from there.

    If your breeder buddy didn't enlighten you to the risks involved with feeding gerbils, then he did you no favors. Every piece of advice has two sides. Your job, as your animal's keeper, is to find out what those sides are with every piece of advice you seek, and them make informed decisions about your animal's care.
  • 02-11-2014, 11:45 AM
    Pyrate81
    Re: Off food... assist feeding?
    I'm chiming in so the OP isn't sitting their chewing fingers to the bone thinking the BP is screwed up for life.

    I fully agree with Slim's points on gerbils and am adding a few points of my own:

    1. Gerbils and Hamsters are considered "fatty" compared to rats and mice and are frowned upon with feeding to a snake for reasons previously stated.

    2. It may not be the end of the world, it is possible if the snake is hooked on gerbils to bring it back via scenting a rat or mouse with a gerbil.

    3. Story- My sister's BP which is now in my possesion ate gerbils for the first 2 years of its life. She said they tried mice and rats and the snake wouldn't even look at them. I take possession of the snake and waited 2 weeks to feed the snake. First thing I offered was a small-medium sized rat which it wrapped right up but let go after 5-10 seconds either cause I spooked the snake or because the rat was too big/strong at the time. I proceeded to feed it mice for the next month, each time it took at least 3 mice without a problem. Then switched to small rats. The snake did not have an issue with switching in my case. Every snake and situation is different, I probably am lucky to have a BP which switched without a hitch.

    4. Patience. You must learn patience. These snakes can and will put you on edge and rattle your nerves. One of my BPs stops eating in October and will probably start eating again next month. He(assuming it's male) is following the same pattern as 2 of my colubrids. It was very frustrating when he did this last year cause I didn't expect it. If he doesn't start to eat, then I know a change will need to be made.

    5. As the snake has now eaten for you, I'd recommend the next feeding be a small rat or an ASF. If anyone has a better recommendation, Pleas override this suggestion.
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