» Site Navigation
2 members and 716 guests
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.
» Today's Birthdays
» Stats
Members: 75,912
Threads: 249,118
Posts: 2,572,194
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, coda
|
-
All my Candoia
Ok, so they aren't all "tree boas," but I wanted to group all the Candoia together.:)
Solomon Island Tree Boas (Candoia bibroni australis)
A breeding group with the female being the darkest and largest. She may already be gravid. The male in the second photo has some great reds.
http://i1230.photobucket.com/albums/...sLizards16.jpg
http://i1230.photobucket.com/albums/...sLizards17.jpg
New Guinea Tree Boas (Candoia carinata carinata)
http://i1230.photobucket.com/albums/...sLizards66.jpg
http://i1230.photobucket.com/albums/...sLizards63.jpg
http://i1230.photobucket.com/albums/...sLizards64.jpg
http://i1230.photobucket.com/albums/...sLizards62.jpg
Solomon Island Ground Boa (Candoia carinata paulsoni)
http://i1230.photobucket.com/albums/...sLizards57.jpg
-
Very nice looking group there.
-
Re: All my Candoia
Thanks TheWinWizard! I love working with Candoia...definitely one of my favs
-
Re: All my Candoia
The camoflauge on that guy is unreal! Great pics:gj:
-
Re: All my Candoia
Very cool and unusual looking snakes! They really blend in with their habitat.
-
I don't know anything about them but they are cool looking!!!
-
Re: All my Candoia
ballpythonluvr and Monster Dodge: I've had them in naturalistic cages before and they were almost impossible to spot. They really camouflage perfect with natural wood and twigs...very much sit and wait predators and don't move very much.
Boanerges: You should look into getting some...they are never aggressive (aside from my prego Candoia), only need to eat once a month, stay super small, and are one of the rarer ones you'll find....a great boa to keep
-
Any clue as to where to get them from?
-
Re: All my Candoia
TheWinWizard ~ The best place I've been able to find them is on Kingsnake (most are wild caught) or at a reptile expo (also most wild caught) Surprisingly in both cases I've never found any with mites. I should also be producing a couple small litters in 9-10 months (C. c. carinata and C. b. australis)
Keep in mind though, w/c can be big pains in the a$$ with feeding. My C. c. carinata will only eat lizards.
-
Re: All my Candoia
Quote:
Originally Posted by bioteacher
TheWinWizard ~ The best place I've been able to find them is on Kingsnake (most are wild caught) or at a reptile expo (also most wild caught) Surprisingly in both cases I've never found any with mites. I should also be producing a couple small litters in 9-10 months (C. c. carinata and C. b. australis)
Keep in mind though, w/c can be big pains in the a$$ with feeding. My C. c. carinata will only eat lizards.
I see, thank you for being honest. They are beautiful snakes though.
-
Re: All my Candoia
Your collection is beautiful! I love the reds on your male.
They are wonderfully colorful animals. I love watching them interact and perch. Much more active than my ball pythons or even the larger true boas.
I've rarely found even WC animals for sale, usually its the occasional WC or more commonly LTC guys hanging around a warehouse. I was lucky to get CBB animals. I wish more people worked with them, they're a great small snake that is very interactive and easy to care for.
(this is clockwork from fauna as well I've got the 2.2 group).
-
Re: All my Candoia
Cinderbird....you should post some photos of your Candoia here. I'd love to see some more of them
-
Re: All my Candoia
-
Re: All my Candoia
No worries about hijacking the thread...I asked:)
That red male that you have is unbelievable...really red! The light colored female is pretty nice looking as well
-
were the solomon's hard to start ?
-
Beautiful .. am definitely getting a bunch of this guys soon
-
I was really thinking about getting one of these guys for a naturalistic vivarium. I definitely do not want WC though. These guys are SO interesting! I really like them.
Maybe post some short and sweet care info on them?
-
good luck! amazing animals
-
Re: All my Candoia
Sorry for the late responses... I haven't been on this forum in a loooong time.
SamuraiZr0 - they were easy to start on mice... except for one which has been really stubborn and still only eats geckos
aboutsnakes & aldebono - definitely get some.... they are great snakes. I should be producing some C. carinata within the next few months and some C. b. australis within the next year. As for a care sheet I just submitted an article for HerpNation Magazine that should be coming out in the next few months. I'll post which month when I find out.
Generally though, 60-75% humidity, branches to climb (body thick), small meals... larger ones may lead to regurge. Hot spot of 87-90, temps in low to mid 80s, mid 70s at night. Live plants or fake plants to sit and hide on are good. Small cages are fine.... 20 gallon tall for a couple C. carinata are good... bigger for C. b. australis. males have spurs and females don't. Babies can be hard to start but generally offer: minnows, tuna fish and scented pinkies, geckos, anoles, assist feed mice tails if you're experienced enough, large water bowl for soaking, and substrate that can hold humidity and be burrowed into... some Candoia will burrow.. C.b. australis won't but can be found on the ground from time to time.
|