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Re: Angry noodle?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Venoshock
I believe Carl was pretty much the same size as yours when I picked her up. She has grown in girth since then (about 2 months).
in the store:
https://31.media.tumblr.com/d2bea366...hnw8o1_500.jpg
Today:
https://38.media.tumblr.com/c599b5c6...hnw8o2_500.jpg
The only reason I didn't feed in the enclosure was because I feared she would ingest her substrate. I'll try feeding her in her cage tomorrow and keep an eye on her.
Unfortunately, my only option is mice right now. Mainly because my mother is grossed out by the idea of keeping a bulk order of f/ts in the house, and my local pet store only stocks f/t mice.
You can also feed him two mice if one isn't doing the job. I had to do that with my female cause I had the same problem with my wife not wanting dead rats in freezer. Lol. I let her be the judge of how much she wants to eat. She doesn't go past three mice a week when she was little. They know when their full. Lol.
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Re: Angry noodle?
Quote:
Originally Posted by alan12013
I wouldn't worry about impaction all that much. Even if you have Aspen bedding and it sticks to the food it's not that big of a deal. I try to avoid it happening a lot but if it did I wouldn't be concerned. As Brian on Snakebytes pointed out it happens in the wild and isn't going to harm the snake. Their stomach acid is pretty serious. That sucks you can't get rats. Maybe post an add on craigslist looking to buy some rats for snake food? That being said I have a 3 year old female that lived most of her life with only eating 2 mice every other week. I now feed her 3 mice every week and am trying to get her over to rats but it's a job.
Ive been feeding out of enclosure with no problems. Not for fear of aggression or impaction but I've seen her struggle getting bedding stuck in her mouth. I guess they can deal with that as well but it looks so uncomfortable. Somebody convince me please, I would rather feed in cage.
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I just got my girl and she has eaten substrate twice...with both of her mice. She can't strike worth a darn, but she's had no issues. Like Veno, I am still on mice because the pet store didn't have f/t rats of appropriate size. She's only about 70-80 grams and is I would assume on rat pinkies at her size. She's only about a month old. She's eating two hoppers every 5 days as of now, but will be on adult medium mice on her next feed. I don't want to order 100+ small rats mainly because they'll go bad before she can eat them all and she's not big enough to eat bigger ones yet. Suggestions?
Note: I've fed in her enclosure twice already and she has no hand aggression accept when feeding. She's very easy going when it comes time to be handled and she's still very young so I assume that's a good sign
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Re: Angry noodle?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tbrown806
Ive been feeding out of enclosure with no problems. Not for fear of aggression or impaction but I've seen her struggle getting bedding stuck in her mouth. I guess they can deal with that as well but it looks so uncomfortable. Somebody convince me please, I would rather feed in cage.
If you're worried about it, put some newspaper on top of the substrate before you put the mouse in, and feed on that. You can remove the newspaper after the snake eats.
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Hey again everyone! It's been about 3-4 days or so and I wanted to give you a little update on Carl.
Friday she ate without any problems and I am very glad that she is where she should be. However, the "cage aggression" is a little worse and I've discovered something else entirely.
The cage aggression has escalated to a point where I can't even go near her enclosure. She has her head poking out of whatever hide she's in and she's almost always poised to strike. I have her in a tank so I thought maybe trying to put a towel over her cage so she doesn't freak out when I move around my room. It hasn't worked. Nonetheless, she acts completely normal when I get her out of her enclosure. It would concern me more if she had always been this way, but its just the sudden switch that makes me believe its something else entirely
What is most concerning is that last night, after a long drink of water, she began making popping noises. I thought that maybe she just got some water in her nose or something but I looked around online and found out that popping noises are a symptom of a RI. Today I still heard the popping but it was much more faint, so I decided to take a look in her mouth. I didn't see any bubbles but I did see a little blood running down from her top jaw. Is any of this at all concerning?
Her general husbandry hasn't changed at all. I've been absolutely on top of her temps and humidity since day 1. She is handled regularly, except after eating. She has never refused a meal for me. Everything in my control seems to be perfect, but her behavior tells me otherwise.
If anything, I'm trying not to be concerned over everything Carl does, but its hard when everything seems to be really concerning.
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