» Site Navigation
2 members and 1,742 guests
Most users ever online was 54,199, 06-29-2026 at 02:43 AM.
» Today's Birthdays
» Stats
Members: 76,102
Threads: 249,249
Posts: 2,572,957
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
|
-
Now were cooking with rats!!!
So everyone says that if part of the rat is cooked it is bad but no one days y. So y is it bad?
-
Bump cuz everyone says it's bad, but apparently no one knows y
-
Re: Now were cooking with rats!!!
Hi,
I don't know why for sure.
I have read that they have issues digesting cooked food but how true it is I couldn't say.
It may speed decomp however which could potentially cause problems during digestion if it rotted faster than it was being digested.
The only other thing I can think of is partially cooked rodents tend to burst during striking and contriction and that is a far from pleasant thing to see, smell or clean up. :puke:
dr del
-
I've got to agree with dr del on this one... it's just not natural, and pretty gross.
-
Re: Now were cooking with rats!!!
Because nature didn't design them that way. Snakes aren't meant to eat something that has been cooked - partially, fully, or any other way other than raw and whole.
Remember that snakes aren't like dogs or cats. We haven't taken them and developed them in certain ways to do certain jobs and be domesticated. Snakes are exactly the same in captivity as they are in the wild - no matter what kind of crazy morph they are, physically they are still the same in the wild. They would never eat cooked food in the wild so nature made them specially designed to swallow and digest their prey whole and freshly raw. ;)
-
y would u even want to cook them?
-
No one is wanting to cook them I was just trying to find out why it is bad incase part of the ft rat accidentally starts to "cook"
-
Well it's going to take some extremely hot water to cook your rodent. I wouldn't really worry about it all that much. Just don't go putting a mouse in your microwave or toaster oven!
-
Re: Now were cooking with rats!!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by steveboos
Well it's going to take some extremely hot water to cook your rodent. I wouldn't really worry about it all that much. Just don't go putting a mouse in your microwave or toaster oven!
I second this based on personal experience. I tried microwaving a rat once. If smells could kill... I threw it outside immediately, and not even the dozens of city raccoons that used to live in our neighborhood would touch it. Truly revolting, something I wouldn't dream of bringing near my snakes!
-
Re: Now were cooking with rats!!!
Hi,
Believe it or not you got lucky.
Rats etc in the microwave have a tendency to explode - laminating their partially cooked internal organs all over the inside of the microwave.
dr del
-
Re: Now were cooking with rats!!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Evenstar
Because nature didn't design them that way. Snakes aren't meant to eat something that has been cooked - partially, fully, or any other way other than raw and whole.
Remember that snakes aren't like dogs or cats. We haven't taken them and developed them in certain ways to do certain jobs and be domesticated. Snakes are exactly the same in captivity as they are in the wild - no matter what kind of crazy morph they are, physically they are still the same in the wild. They would never eat cooked food in the wild so nature made them specially designed to swallow and digest their prey whole and freshly raw. ;)
If you could actually get a snake to eat something like a cooked mouse or something, I don't see why it would harm it. I mean they eat RAW Mice and Rats, Whole. They have amazing digestive systems and Immune systems. So eating something more sanitary than there usual meal, I wouldn't understand them being harmed.
-
Re: Now were cooking with rats!!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by dr del
Hi,
Believe it or not you got lucky.
Rats etc in the microwave have a tendency to explode - laminating their partially cooked internal organs all over the inside of the microwave.
dr del
I second that. tried using my x girlfriends microwave to thaw a rat years ago and the resulting rat explosion was a really gross outcome. and needless to say she was not really happy about it. lol
-
Re: Now were cooking with rats!!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by dr del
Hi,
Believe it or not you got lucky.
Rats etc in the microwave have a tendency to explode - laminating their partially cooked internal organs all over the inside of the microwave.
dr del
OMG sooo gross!!!!
-
A lot of cats can't digest cooked meat, don't ask me why. Two of my four got physically ill when I fed them cooked turkey-there was no seasoning/butter on it. That's somewhat common for sensitive cats. I'm assuming many animals are like that since they don't eat their food cooked. We don't eat our food raw, therefore when we do, we get ill even when there is nothing wrong with the meat. Our bodies just aren't used to it.
-
I don't know if there would be any problems digesting cooked meat but the process of cooking destroys a handful of vitamins and minerals in the meat as humans we are omnivorous, snakes are not they need to get 100% of the nutritional value from the meat they eat if you only fed cooked you would likely have to add supplements to complete the nutritional needs.
I know snakes are not cats but I don't think it is a big leap to assume that nutritional needs of carnivores are similar is it?
"The findings from a ten-year feeding study of cats conducted a little over
70 years ago by a doctor in California reveal that feeding cats raw food
had a dramatic and positive impact on their health and well-being when
compared to cats fed cooked meat."
http://www.blakkatz.com/sample.pdf
-
Re: Now were cooking with rats!!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by dr del
hi,
believe it or not you got lucky.
Rats etc in the microwave have a tendency to explode - laminating their partially cooked internal organs all over the inside of the microwave.
Dr del
:o
-
Technically, cooked food is easier to digest and should pose no problem. A special on the Science Channel (How Cooking Made Us Human) was based all on it and how we evolved such intelligent brains. Never mind that, but they did take two snakes (I think they were burms), fed one some raw steak, and fed the other cooked hamburger, and by checking the amount of oxygen used (an indirect way to see how much energy is used), the python that ate the cooked meat used 24% less energy/oxygen while digesting.
Just thought I'd throw this out here.
|