Re: Do BP babies bite a lot?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
1nstinct
Slow and stead will help. Start handling sessions slow~5min then gradually move up to longer sessions, soon they will be more comfortable with you and will tolerate handling a lot more. Or yours can be like my black pastel who will bite me every chance he gets.
Don't handle for 2 days after feeding, and I would give your bp some time to adjust, he's new. He's scared(new environment). I would wait untill he has had 3 consecutive feeding(3 weeks) before you start handling him. Try to keep handling to a minimum untill he has fed 3 time consecutively.
x2, great advice!
Re: Do BP babies bite a lot?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
1nstinct
Slow and stead will help. Start handling sessions slow~5min then gradually move up to longer sessions, soon they will be more comfortable with you and will tolerate handling a lot more. Or yours can be like my black pastel who will bite me every chance he gets.
Don't handle for 2 days after feeding, and I would give your bp some time to adjust, he's new. He's scared(new environment). I would wait untill he has had 3 consecutive feeding(3 weeks) before you start handling him. Try to keep handling to a minimum untill he has fed 3 time consecutively.
That advice is just what I was looking for myself for my recently purchased nine month old that I have only fed once so far.
Re: Do BP babies bite a lot?
I think only maybe 10 or 20% of the babies are really hardcore biters? Most of them, once they adjust to their new home and you feed them a mouse, they'll figure out the difference between "prey" and "your finger".
... that said, my very first ball python was a het pied named Mr. Nibbles. He did grow out of it, but I honestly think he enjoyed chewing on me. He'd even stalk my toes across the couch the way a kitten does! Kinda cute, but with a painful ending.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
moonlightgdess
I just got a baby poss het axanthic...I named him Mars, God of war lol. I have noticed though that they will mellow out once they get a little bigger and higher on the food chain.
Yeah, I think that's basically right. Or alternately: the biters seem to mellow out at about the 1 year mark, when their hormones turn on the first time. Because you can't get a mate if you snap and hiss at everything that moves?