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Heating frozen mice

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  • 05-02-2013, 08:35 PM
    ChaosAffect
    Heating frozen mice
    So, I think my wife is getting sick of me stealing her hair dryer to warm up thawed p/k mice... I was going to go out and buy another one, but then I thought, "Hey wouldn't a heat gun do the job better?". I checked out HarborFreight (There's one 10 minutes from my house) and they've got one for $14 (http://www.harborfreight.com/1500-wa...112-96289.html). I'm a little concerned about the minimum temp, though... 572 degrees. Obviously I don't want to cook the mouse.

    So what do y'all use to heat up your frozen mice?
  • 05-02-2013, 08:46 PM
    iCandiBallPythons
    Re: Heating frozen mice
    Hot water

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  • 05-02-2013, 08:47 PM
    Mike41793
    Heating frozen mice
    Water. About 100-115degree water.
  • 05-02-2013, 08:57 PM
    ChaosAffect
    I do the water sometimes, but it's a lot messier than thawing in the fridge overnight then hitting it with a hair dryer to warm it up.
  • 05-02-2013, 09:10 PM
    iCandiBallPythons
    Re: Heating frozen mice
    Not messy for me

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  • 05-02-2013, 09:27 PM
    ChaosAffect
    Ooooo Kkkkk... I guess the point of my question is, is that heat gun too hot? I have no clue what the average hair dryer gets up to, but I'd imagine that a heat gun would be more durable and long lasting. I'd like to know if anyone else is using something similar.
  • 05-02-2013, 09:34 PM
    Inarikins
    Asked my hairdresser mother and my plumber father and they decided that a hairdryer puts about 100-150* out.
  • 05-02-2013, 09:44 PM
    Mike41793
    Heating frozen mice
    That will be too hot lol. Human meats only need to be cooked to 165degrees max (rare steak starts at 120degrees). 572degrees will incinerate those rats lol.
  • 05-02-2013, 09:44 PM
    I-KandyReptiles
    Heating frozen mice
    Water seems like a much safer idea.

    If you cooked the mouse and didn't know, that would be a disaster.
  • 05-02-2013, 09:46 PM
    Meletee
    Yeah I'm pretty sure that would cook it. I just thaw mine at room temp, pop it in a ziploc baggy, and soak in hot water for a few minutes.
  • 05-02-2013, 10:20 PM
    Raven01
    Re: Heating frozen mice
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by ChaosAffect View Post
    I do the water sometimes, but it's a lot messier than thawing in the fridge overnight then hitting it with a hair dryer to warm it up.

    You can still thaw in the fridge overnight and use slightly cooler water to warm or park them under a heat lamp.

    500+ degrees is far too hot. This is suitable for removing paint and starting fires not warming rodents.
  • 05-02-2013, 10:48 PM
    ChaosAffect
    Re: Heating frozen mice
    Hmm... I hadn't thought of a heat lamp. I've got a couple CHEs that I'm not using right now.

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  • 05-02-2013, 11:41 PM
    rossi46
    Re: Heating frozen mice
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by ChaosAffect View Post
    I do the water sometimes, but it's a lot messier than thawing in the fridge overnight then hitting it with a hair dryer to warm it up.

    Have you tried putting the frozen critter in a plastic baggie before putting it into hot water? :weirdface Might help with whatever "messiness" issues you're dealing with.
  • 05-03-2013, 12:25 AM
    Derrick
    Re: Heating frozen mice
    I use a cheap lamp from wal-mart and a 250 whatt inrared bulb.
  • 05-03-2013, 12:45 AM
    ChaosAffect
    Re: Heating frozen mice
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by rossi46 View Post
    Have you tried putting the frozen critter in a plastic baggie before putting it into hot water? :weirdface Might help with whatever "messiness" issues you're dealing with.

    LoL. Yeah. Once I had a leaky bag and some mouse soup, which was pretty disgusting.

    It all comes down to location. The microwave is downstairs in the kitchen, the rack is upstairs in my office. So to use hot water I have to nuke it, bring the container upstairs, let the baggie sit in the container for a few minutes, take the baggie out (dripping water in the process), etc, etc... When I heat them up using a hair dryer I just defrost them overnight in the fridge, bring the baggie upstairs, dump the mouse on a paper towel, hold a hair dryer on it for a few minutes, bob's yer uncle. Much simpler. Once I get a dedicated mouse-warming hair dryer I'm going to attach a thin cardboard cone to the end of it so I can just set it over the mouse and not have to worry about blowing it off the table (which has happened a couple of times).

    Anywho, my question's been answered. No baking frozen mice with a heat gun. Thanks, everyone!
  • 05-03-2013, 01:52 PM
    maegalcarwen
    Defrosting
    It is quite simple... you buy a small plastic bowl for yourself, a stupid color, so you both know its for the mice. You but almost boiling (tap-hot) water in it, you put in the mouse, and you have it ready in 10 mins. Make sure it is body-heat warm for the snake. That's it. Not messy, not smelly, doesn't annoy anyone.
  • 05-03-2013, 03:23 PM
    MorbidWolfess
    Do NOT get a heat gun. Snakes cannot digest cooked meat, and if you accidentally cooked it that would be a disaster. Cooked meat does not process, and usually ends up severely hurting the digestive tract of the snake. Your best bet is to get your own hair dryer for your mice, maybe a mini one of a different color, or just simply use hot tap water. :)
  • 05-07-2013, 03:47 PM
    jackiee
    Re: Heating frozen mice
    I bought the cheapest hairdryer I could, and its been good for the last 9 months touch wood.
  • 05-07-2013, 04:00 PM
    Mike41793
    Heating frozen mice
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by maegalcarwen View Post
    It is quite simple... you buy a small plastic bowl for yourself, a stupid color, so you both know its for the mice. You but almost boiling (tap-hot) water in it, you put in the mouse, and you have it ready in 10 mins. Make sure it is body-heat warm for the snake. That's it. Not messy, not smelly, doesn't annoy anyone.

    You don't want to use boiling water, that will cook the rat. The water that comes out of your tap isn't that close to boiling.
  • 05-07-2013, 04:16 PM
    AGoldReptiles
    Heating frozen mice
    I let the rodents "air" thaw. Then I throw them into the "hot box" until there nice and warm, around 100 degerees. I started using hot water years ago. Decidied I must not like "rat soup" and then went to the "air" thaw, warm with a hair dryer method. I even made a hairdryer holder from a clamp for a dome light, but as the collection grew this became way to time consuming and not very energy efficient. So I decided to make a "hot box".



    [IMG]http://i232.photobucket.com/albums/e...orVideo219.jpg[/IMG]



    [IMG]http://i232.photobucket.com/albums/e...orVideo220.jpg[/IMG]



    Works great and could easily be scaled up for larger collections.:gj:



    Anthony


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
  • 05-07-2013, 06:08 PM
    maegalcarwen
    Mike, thank you for the lesson. I hope the rest was at least useful.
  • 05-07-2013, 07:27 PM
    Minjo
    Heating frozen mice
    Hot water. I use an soup thermos to keep the heat.


    Minjo
    1.0 genetic stripe (Kanubis Ihmotep)
    0.0.1 normal (Miss Snakey Balla Masquerade aka Balla)
    3.0 cats ( DK, Todor, Max)
  • 05-07-2013, 07:32 PM
    Tannerrrtx
    Re: Heating frozen mice
    500 is waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaayyyyyy too hot. just heat up some water, i usually leave mine in the sink with the hot water running. does the trick.
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