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

» Site Navigation

» Home
 > FAQ

» Online Users: 610

1 members and 609 guests
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.

» Today's Birthdays

» Stats

Members: 75,905
Threads: 249,104
Posts: 2,572,108
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, Pattyhud

Best step-it-up snake

Printable View

  • 12-07-2012, 08:10 PM
    Ridinandreptiles
    Re: Best step-it-up snake
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Mike41793 View Post
    "i rescued a mean retic but swiftly gave it to a guy who had more experience."

    mike, there is more to it than that; yes that quote makes it sound very hypocritical though. i took the snake it knowing that at that current time he was more than i could swallow. at this current time i feel that i could handle a large snake in a few more months of planning. When i rescued the big guy, i did it only because the owner wouldve literally killed him if he wasnt taken. and he descibed killing him with a shovel.
  • 12-07-2012, 08:54 PM
    Chkadii
    I have faith in ridinandreptiles's ability to care for reptiles. Everyone has to start somewhere when keeping a new species. Part of being a responsible keeper is knowing when you're in over your head, and he did the right thing by giving the rescue the home it needs rather than having it suffer because he was inexperienced at the time. If he kept the snake even though he couldn't care for it, it'd be neglect at best, or considered hoarding. Some of us own dogs, does that mean we could all handle rehabilitating an aggressive, abused individual? Does that mean we should never consider owning dogs again? Now that he's in a better place to consider owning a giant, instead of picking up a hatchling burm at a show and blowing up the boards with SOS posts, he talked to experienced keepers and is asking our advice. He's got more snakes and experience than a lot of people on this board, and he's shown time and time again that he's committed to them.

    That said, ridinandreptiles, figure out your what your workload entails with the new ratsnakes before picking up a giant. After that you have my blessing. I'm totally inexperienced so I can't give you any other advice than "the purple albino retics look the coolest!" ;)
  • 12-07-2012, 09:18 PM
    Ridinandreptiles
    Re: Best step-it-up snake
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Chkadii View Post
    I have faith in ridinandreptiles's ability to care for reptiles. Everyone has to start somewhere when keeping a new species. Part of being a responsible keeper is knowing when you're in over your head, and he did the right thing by giving the rescue the home it needs rather than having it suffer because he was inexperienced at the time. If he kept the snake even though he couldn't care for it, it'd be neglect at best, or considered hoarding. Some of us own dogs, does that mean we could all handle rehabilitating an aggressive, abused individual? Does that mean we should never consider owning dogs again? Now that he's in a better place to consider owning a giant, instead of picking up a hatchling burm at a show and blowing up the boards with SOS posts, he talked to experienced keepers and is asking our advice. He's got more snakes and experience than a lot of people on this board, and he's shown time and time again that he's committed to them.

    That said, ridinandreptiles, figure out your what your workload entails with the new ratsnakes before picking up a giant. After that you have my blessing. I'm totally inexperienced so I can't give you any other advice than "the purple albino retics look the coolest!" ;)

    Thank you! Although I ditched the ratsnakes. Too much work for what they were worth to me. I'm sticking to pythons. Actually downsizing to make room for new projects
  • 12-11-2012, 01:15 PM
    Tim Mead
    Re: Best step-it-up snake
    New spin, Visit collections of large snakes verus more managable snakes and tell me which one smells better ..Large snakes are a chore and far more respect needs to be practiced..Been there and done that..If a person wants to provide QUALITY care for their keep they need to keep in mind ALL that it will entail..
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v4.2.1