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  • 04-02-2012, 09:20 PM
    Annarose15
    Re: Do females ever EAT males?
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Vypyrz View Post
    I hope this doesn't sound like a dumb question, but, if the female was curled up, did you look under her?

    Doesn't seem like a dumb question to me - that's a very effective way to say NO!

    To the OP - How long have they been housed together? When was her last feeding? Has she gained 600-1200g in, say, the last 24 hours? Weighing her would immediately answer your cannibalism concern.
  • 04-02-2012, 10:00 PM
    lilprncss214
    Re: Do females ever EAT males?
    He is not under her, or hiding in the log in the enclosure. We've searched the room...We turned the heat lamp back on in his tank and left the lid ajar. Hoping he gets homesick and finds his way back. She was not starved...our snakes are all fed regularly and cleaned, and handled regularly. Thank you for the reassurances that she did not eat him. I don't think in my heart that she did either, but it's hard to believe he found a way out. Oh, and they do not live in the same tank....my daughter put him in there to breed.
  • 04-02-2012, 10:31 PM
    Tye Hicks
    Re: Do females ever EAT males?
    I have looked in a tank and have had a hard time finding my bp before. I have seen bp's and boa's bury themselves in thier substraight. Chances are that he he close by. Look in any close by boxes. Good luck im sure he will turn up. If she did try to eat him I dont think she would have lived.
  • 04-02-2012, 10:58 PM
    loonunit
    Can you post a picture of the female, and one of the tank, please? I've seriously "lost" snakes, only to find them hidden in the bedding several hours later.

    I've also had an escapee disappear into my closet for two weeks. I know he was in there, because I did the talcum powder trick. And there was nothing for two weeks, and then there was a exit track from the guest room closet, with no entrance track. And Mr. Nibbles was just hanging out in the living room, knocking the potted plants off the window sill while he tried to get outside.
  • 04-02-2012, 11:01 PM
    angllady2
    Do not underestimate their ability to escape.

    Earlier this season I had the same scare. I was completely convinced my female ate my male. She looked really swollen and was moving stiffly, I was so upset. I told my husband if she did eat my vanilla male I'd strangle her with my own hands.

    Two days go by, and no sign of my beloved male, and the female is unusually quiet and sluggish, I just knew she ate him. Then out of the blue, I'm sitting on the chair near the rack just sad and angry, and I glance at the breeder rack, and low and behold. There, wedged behind the female's tub, on the edge of her heat tape, is my male! Curled up in a little ball, and none the worse for wear. I finally managed to extricate him and put him back in his home. Later that night as I was getting ready for bed, I notice a horrible smell in the vicinity of the rack. Guess why the female was swollen and crabby ? It took me fifteen minutes to get her tub clean!

    Don't give up hope, and think SMALL when you search. He'll turn up I'll bet.

    Gale
  • 04-02-2012, 11:14 PM
    SquamishSerpents
    Re: Do females ever EAT males?
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by LGray23 View Post
    Cannibalism does happen, but more often then not it kills both snakes, and it's usually VERY noticeable. I'm voting for escapee as well, and once you find him, put him in his own enclosure.

    http://squamishserpents.ca/care-info...-one-enclosure

    Thanks for posting my link! :)

    And yeah while my article was mostly written to educate people of the dangers of cohabbing, the photos show very clearly what it looks like when one snake eats another, so it was still helpful!

    OP, I hope you find your snake! We've been lucky so far with finding escapees pretty quickly, but sometimes they can take awhile to find. Look wherever you can, and if he doesn't turn up, set an alarm for the middle of the night, leave a flashlight beside your bed, and wander your place in the dark, looking for the snake.
  • 04-04-2012, 06:41 PM
    lilprncss214
    I am so happy to report that he returned to his tank on his own yesterday! All of the tanks will now have 4 clips instead of just two. I knew in my heart that she did not eat him, but he was nowhere to be found. Fooled us...lol...he just didn't want to be found. It also makes me feel like our snakes like their homes or he wouldn't have come back. We love all our animals and the thought of any on of them getting hurt or killed is just horrible.
  • 04-04-2012, 07:00 PM
    Inknsteel
    Glad to hear he has returned safely. Good idea on the clips. You now see how sneaky these snakes can be... :gj:
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