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Question about my best friend's RTB feeding sched.
My best friend, Kelly, has an eight to ten foot long Guyana Red Tail, and she is quite hefty. She feeds it one frozen petco rat a month. The $8 one, I think it's "Large". I feel like she's underfeeding it, but I'm no expert- so I figured, you guys are! I'll ask! I wish I could tell you what she weighs, or how big around she is, but I can't think of anything standard. I've always thought she looked skinny, but like I said, no expert.
Thanks in advance!
Lifelong animal lover. Current college student. Desired profession; Veterinarian.
1.0 Fiance (Micheal), 1.1 Horses, 0.1 German Shepherd, 0.1 Dwarf Hamster, 1.1 Cats,
0.2 Leopard Geckos, 1.0 Normal BP, 1.0 Butter BP, 1.0 Bumblebee BP.
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Re: Question about my best friend's RTB feeding sched.
Take a picture and post it. How are you measuring the length of the snake? 8 feet is common 10 feet is a really big snake. How old is the snake and is the feeding schedule the same year round?
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Re: Question about my best friend's RTB feeding sched.
One rat a month is not enough no matter what size it is. It will survive, but it's not going to be as happy as it could be with a more frequent feeding. My big ones, 8 to 10 feet, get a couple of retired females every week to 10 days with an occasional Jumbo male or two in between. They're hefty but not fat.
I may not be very smart, but what if I am?
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Registered User
We measured the snake based on my friend's height. Kelly is 6 feet tall, and the snake is longer than she is all. Someone dumped the snake when it was about 6 feet long five years ago on her property, and she kept it as a pet. No clue on the real age. I'll see if I can find a picture.
Lifelong animal lover. Current college student. Desired profession; Veterinarian.
1.0 Fiance (Micheal), 1.1 Horses, 0.1 German Shepherd, 0.1 Dwarf Hamster, 1.1 Cats,
0.2 Leopard Geckos, 1.0 Normal BP, 1.0 Butter BP, 1.0 Bumblebee BP.
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Registered User

This is the only picture I have
Edit: Link if the picture doesn't appear for you guys: http://imgur.com/sPeP8fL
Last edited by Kiyayiya; 08-18-2013 at 11:36 AM.
Lifelong animal lover. Current college student. Desired profession; Veterinarian.
1.0 Fiance (Micheal), 1.1 Horses, 0.1 German Shepherd, 0.1 Dwarf Hamster, 1.1 Cats,
0.2 Leopard Geckos, 1.0 Normal BP, 1.0 Butter BP, 1.0 Bumblebee BP.
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Kinda hard to judge by the pic but the snake looks fine to me: not underfed skinny and not obese.
I would personally be feeding this snake every 2 weeks on an extra large/jumbo rat/smaller rabbit (depending on if this snake really is 8-10').
~Angelica~
See my collection HERE
4.15 Ball Pythons
1.1 Angolan Pythons
2.2 Cali Kings_______________________0.1 SSTP Black Blood
1.1 T+ Argentine BCOs______________1.0 Snow Bull
1.3 Colombian morph BCIs___________0.1 Coastal Carpet
0.1 Hog Island BCI__________________0.1 Platinum Retic
0.1 Het Anery BCL __________________0.1 Lavender Albino Citron Retic
0.2 Central American morph BCIs_____1.0 Blonde/Caramel Retic
0.1 Pokigron Suriname BCC__________0.1 Goldenchild Retic
0.0.1 Corn
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BPnet Veteran
That Boa look fantastic, great body shape.
I know every one will not agree with me. But that feeding schedule is perfectly fine. in the wild they may not eat for months.
My adults fall in a feeding between 2-4 weeks. Males and females both will go of feed during breeding and gestation.
I have breeding males go off feed for 7 months and not lose any weight.
One my first boas a male didn't eat for year and didn't lose any weight.
BOAS
1.0 Pastel Dream ghost poss 66% het sharp,1.2 Monstertail dh Sharp Sunglow,1.0 Monstertail het Sharp, 1.0 Hypo poss 50% het Albino 50% strip, 1.0 Mexican BCI, 0.1 Classic Columbia type, 0.1 Mexican BCI / Brazilian BCC cross, 0.1 Albino 25% Suriname cross, 0.1 Sharp 66% het anery, 1.1 66% poss Parahet, 0.1 arabesque poss jungle, 1.0 anery het sharp, 0.1 lemke/lucy pastel salmon 50% het anery 1.1 aney kenyan sand boa, 1.1 bullseye/pearl brb
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BPnet Veteran
I know every one will not agree with me. But that feeding schedule is perfectly fine. in the wild they may not eat for months.
My adults fall in a feeding between 2-4 weeks.
I do, I feed my two healthy boas every 3 weeks, and both are in great health and body shape. The scrawny rescue one I feed once a week, but smaller meals, just because I'm slowly getting his weight and condition back to where it should be. For the two on the 3 week schedule, it was really based on how often they started looking for food. They are both pretty consistent with starting to roam more at the 2 1/2 week mark. And I've actually gone 4 weeks with Ryuu a couple times, simply because he was still just laying about and not looking for food. He's a perfect "loaf" shape and solid muscle, so I think it works just fine for him.
A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort. ~ Herm Albright
The current zoo:
Pets
2.1 Felis catus; 1.2 Ringneck Doves; 1.1 Budgies; bunches o' Rats/Mice (pets and feeders);
2.1 BCI; 1.0 BP; 1.0 Corn; 1.0 Honduran Milksnake; 1.0 Brazilian Rainbow Boa; 0.1 Dumeril's Boa; 1.0 Texas Ratsnake; 1.0 Calico Black Ratsnake; 1.1 Western Hognose; 0.1 Beardie; 0.1 Tawny Plated Lizard; 1.0 Blue-Tongue Skink; 0.1 Crestie; 0.1 Spiny-tailed Iguana; 0.0.1 Chaco Striped Knee Tarantula
Fosters/Rescues
2.0 BCI
0.2.2 BP
1.0 Corn
1.0 Red-Foot Tortoise
1.0 Greek Tortoise
0.0.10 Leopard Tortoises
0.0.1 Asian Vine Snake
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Registered User
Okay :3 Thank you guys for the great replies. I was just curious because I'm used to my guys eating weekly. I understand that in the wild they can go a very long time without eating, especially in the wild. I'm more of a "better safe than sorry" and "never hurts to ask" kind of person, especially with animals (:
Lifelong animal lover. Current college student. Desired profession; Veterinarian.
1.0 Fiance (Micheal), 1.1 Horses, 0.1 German Shepherd, 0.1 Dwarf Hamster, 1.1 Cats,
0.2 Leopard Geckos, 1.0 Normal BP, 1.0 Butter BP, 1.0 Bumblebee BP.
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Re: Question about my best friend's RTB feeding sched.
I agree with the others. I think the snake looks great in that picture. You can bump up a bit during the warm season and back off to the same schedule. I guess if the snake looks good and is not giving obvious signs of hunger things seem OK.
As you can see there are some differing opinions. I think the bottom line is if anybody can read the behavior and see whether or not it appears hungry, if it looks good "loaf" shape and muscular and sheds are good things are going well.
If the owner is not in tune with those things, they need to be and go from there.
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