Re: feeding in a feeding tub causes organ damage and kills snakes?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Merriah
I have always provided food in a separate bin. I use a substrate from Good Ole Hemp, and it's very soft, but it's very small pieces. He could easily ingest some of it when he strikes to eat. So I put him in a clean bin to make sure he eats the mouse and only the mouse. Plus, I get to see him up close through the process which I think is very fun to watch!
What will happen if your snake ingests substrate?
Please provide firsthand experience - not what you've "heard" on a forum.
Thanks!
Re: feeding in a feeding tub causes organ damage and kills snakes?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
paulh
Results depend on what the substrate is, snake's size and how much is swallowed. A few grains of sand or a bit of leaf is harmless; it passes through and is expelled with the feces.
A web search with "sand impaction leopard gecko" (minus the quotes) as keywords will get you a lot of hits.
Corn cob bedding has rather large pieces that swell when moisture is added. That can cause fatal impaction if swallowed.
http://www.nbcnews.com/id/13939272/n...lanket-python/ has a piece about a Burmese python that swallowed an electric blanket.
Once, years ago, I opened up a friend's dead California king snake. Substrate was kitty litter. The only thing I could find wrong was a 2 mm piece of kitty litter in the lung. IMO, inhaling that was the cause of death, and I crossed kitty litter off my list of acceptable substrates.
A snake is not a leopard gecko....the cerastes I used to keep always ingested sand as do the shovel nosed snakes I currently keep. They ate and crapped just fine, as they do in the wild living in and on....sand.
Corn and kitty litter are crappy substrates as are glass, nails and thumb tacks. Impaction from wood substrates, fiber substrates and even sand in snakes is a non-issue....well, I guess if a bunch of people with no direct experience with it say it's an issue over and over again, it can take on a life of its own.
Re: feeding in a feeding tub causes organ damage and kills snakes?
I'm still trying to understand HOW tub feeding would cause organ damage???? I don't understand the logic.
I have my older b.p. on cypress mulch and got a scare the first time I fed him on that substrate. He ingested what I thought was a fairly large, and rigid bit of bark, with the rat pup. It's very possible I'm overreacting, but since then, I feed him in a large tub with a newspaper liner, which is placed right next to his enclosure. I wait right there till he's finished eating and starts to crawl out of that tub. I then very gently pick him up and return him to his normal enclosure. He seems to be fine with it and it certainly makes ME feel better. LOL My younger b.p. is already on newspaper as a substrate so I feed her in her enclosure. So far, everyone is happy. :-)
I would be very interested though, in any documented evidence of organ damage that was directly related to tub feeding. I'm always willing to change my mind IF presented with reliable documentation that there's a better way. Anecdotes don't qualify as "factual" for me.