Vote for BP.Net for the 2013 Forum of the Year! Click here for more info.

» Site Navigation

» Home
 > FAQ

» Online Users: 668

0 members and 668 guests
No Members online
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.

» Today's Birthdays

None

» Stats

Members: 75,905
Threads: 249,106
Posts: 2,572,115
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, Pattyhud
Page 2 of 3 FirstFirst 123 LastLast
Results 11 to 20 of 27
  1. #11
    BPnet Senior Member JodanOrNoDan's Avatar
    Join Date
    09-23-2015
    Location
    Everglades
    Posts
    3,042
    Thanks
    2,017
    Thanked 2,853 Times in 1,575 Posts
    Images: 77

    Re: Is there an alternative for a heater/CHE?

    Quote Originally Posted by cchardwick View Post
    Not sure where you live but I would at least monitor your ambient temps in your room. If you feed your ball python and your temps go below 80F it could kill your snake, this is especially true with colubrids, if you feed them a few weeks before hibernation they can't get rid of the food in their system and will die. Not sure what the minimum temps are for ball pythons but I would imagine it's around 80F, especially since you don't have a hotspot. Most snakes will eat and then sit on the hot spot (90F) to digest. You could get a heat tape and thermostat and plug them into a 'Kill a Watt' to monitor your electricity usage, I'm guessing it wouldn't be more than a couple bucks a month. Ambient temps should go no lower than the mid 70's. Ideally a room temp of 82 is perfect, but heating the room would be more expensive than a heat tape and thermostat. If your room is cold (mid 70s) it's probably OK since the snake will just hang out over the hot spot all day. If you can afford it I'd also get another heat lamp and a separate thermostat to keep your 'cold side' at 80F. If your room goes down into the 60s I'd say you have a serious problem. Or if you live in the tropics near the equator you may not have an issue LOL.
    And to add a little more, even though it is probably not relevant in this situation, cooling is just as important as heating. Those of us in warm climates have to contend with indoor temperature spikes. I spend far more effort and money cooling than I do heating. My ac died this summer and I ended up having to pay through the nose to get a new one immediately. Temps easily reach 95 inside my house in the summer without AC. Heat will kill a ball faster than cold will.
    Honest, I only need one more ...

  2. #12
    BPnet Veteran Tonald Drump's Avatar
    Join Date
    10-23-2017
    Posts
    364
    Thanks
    97
    Thanked 128 Times in 84 Posts

    Re: Is there an alternative for a heater/CHE?

    Quote Originally Posted by JodanOrNoDan View Post
    And to add a little more, even though it is probably not relevant in this situation, cooling is just as important as heating. Those of us in warm climates have to contend with indoor temperature spikes. I spend far more effort and money cooling than I do heating. My ac died this summer and I ended up having to pay through the nose to get a new one immediately. Temps easily reach 95 inside my house in the summer without AC. Heat will kill a ball faster than cold will.
    Ok, is there a way to keep a certain area cool easily? I'm basically a newb to keeping BPs

    Sent from my vivo 1601 using Tapatalk

  3. #13
    BPnet Senior Member JodanOrNoDan's Avatar
    Join Date
    09-23-2015
    Location
    Everglades
    Posts
    3,042
    Thanks
    2,017
    Thanked 2,853 Times in 1,575 Posts
    Images: 77

    Re: Is there an alternative for a heater/CHE?

    Quote Originally Posted by Tonald Drump View Post
    I have, my dad thinks because he had a snake once that he knows ALL about them. Oh, he basically knows nothing imo. He thinks I shouldn't take the time to warm up water for a bath, just use freezing cold water. "It's fine, he doesn't take baths in warm water in the wild, does he?" Itvs because of this behavior that I can't make a proper enclosure for my snake.

    Sent from my vivo 1601 using Tapatalk
    In this case both of you are a little off in practice. There is no need to give a ball python a bath. They do not like it one bit and there is no benefit to it that cannot be accomplished with a damp cloth.

    Explain to your parents that balls are tropical snakes. Their temp requirements are very narrow. A body temp between 84 and 88 is ideal. Being outside of that for too long is courting illness and or death. A vet trip plus medicine to treat a respiratory infection is going to cost more than setting up the environment correctly to begin with.
    Honest, I only need one more ...

  4. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to JodanOrNoDan For This Useful Post:

    Kira (10-27-2017),PokeyTheNinja (10-27-2017)

  5. #14
    BPnet Veteran Tonald Drump's Avatar
    Join Date
    10-23-2017
    Posts
    364
    Thanks
    97
    Thanked 128 Times in 84 Posts

    Re: Is there an alternative for a heater/CHE?

    Quote Originally Posted by JodanOrNoDan View Post
    In this case both of you are a little off in practice. There is no need to give a ball python a bath. They do not like it one bit and there is no benefit to it that cannot be accomplished with a damp cloth.

    Explain to your parents that balls are tropical snakes. Their temp requirements are very narrow. A body temp between 84 and 88 is ideal. Being outside of that for too long is courting illness and or death. A vet trip plus medicine to treat a respiratory infection is going to cost more than setting up the environment correctly to begin with.
    Yes, I'm aware, I clean him with a cloth dipped in warm water. But, he insists cold water is fine. They also think that the effect of a heat gradient in the enclosure can be achieved by... letting the snake bask for an hour a day.

    Sent from my vivo 1601 using Tapatalk

  6. #15
    BPnet Senior Member JodanOrNoDan's Avatar
    Join Date
    09-23-2015
    Location
    Everglades
    Posts
    3,042
    Thanks
    2,017
    Thanked 2,853 Times in 1,575 Posts
    Images: 77

    Re: Is there an alternative for a heater/CHE?

    Quote Originally Posted by Tonald Drump View Post
    Yes, I'm aware, I clean him with a cloth dipped in warm water. But, he insists cold water is fine. They also think that the effect of a heat gradient in the enclosure can be achieved by... letting the snake bask for an hour a day.

    Sent from my vivo 1601 using Tapatalk
    Ball pythons are not basking snakes. They are nocturnal.
    Honest, I only need one more ...

  7. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to JodanOrNoDan For This Useful Post:

    PitOnTheProwl (10-27-2017),PokeyTheNinja (10-27-2017)

  8. #16
    Registered User PythonBabes's Avatar
    Join Date
    05-01-2016
    Posts
    405
    Thanks
    71
    Thanked 268 Times in 143 Posts
    Images: 2
    If you can't provide the proper husbandry for the snakes, rehome them to someone who can.
    1.0- Pastel het Pied- Khaa

  9. The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to PythonBabes For This Useful Post:

    BallPythonWannaBe (10-27-2017),Kira (10-27-2017),PitOnTheProwl (10-27-2017),PokeyTheNinja (10-27-2017),SDA (10-27-2017)

  10. #17
    BPnet Senior Member JodanOrNoDan's Avatar
    Join Date
    09-23-2015
    Location
    Everglades
    Posts
    3,042
    Thanks
    2,017
    Thanked 2,853 Times in 1,575 Posts
    Images: 77

    Re: Is there an alternative for a heater/CHE?

    Quote Originally Posted by Tonald Drump View Post
    Ok, is there a way to keep a certain area cool easily? I'm basically a newb to keeping BPs

    Sent from my vivo 1601 using Tapatalk
    In my case I set my central AC at 86 durring the day and 84 at night. This is the easiest. Alternatives are good air circulation combined with evaporation. A ball that is getting too hot for their liking will often wrap around their water bowl since it is generally cooler than the surrounding air due to evaporation. You can also cover part of the tank with a damp towel which will bring temps down a bit.
    Honest, I only need one more ...

  11. The Following User Says Thank You to JodanOrNoDan For This Useful Post:

    Tonald Drump (10-27-2017)

  12. #18
    BPnet Veteran Tonald Drump's Avatar
    Join Date
    10-23-2017
    Posts
    364
    Thanks
    97
    Thanked 128 Times in 84 Posts

    Re: Is there an alternative for a heater/CHE?

    Quote Originally Posted by JodanOrNoDan View Post
    Ball pythons are not basking snakes. They are nocturnal.
    Yes, I'm aware, and that's what I've been trying to tell them. Btw the things I mentioned earlier was offtopic, just to show how cocky my dad is

    Sent from my vivo 1601 using Tapatalk

  13. #19
    BPnet Veteran Tonald Drump's Avatar
    Join Date
    10-23-2017
    Posts
    364
    Thanks
    97
    Thanked 128 Times in 84 Posts

    Re: Is there an alternative for a heater/CHE?

    Quote Originally Posted by JodanOrNoDan View Post
    In my case I set my central AC at 86 durring the day and 84 at night. This is the easiest. Alternatives are good air circulation combined with evaporation. A ball that is getting too hot for their liking will often wrap around their water bowl since it is generally cooler than the surrounding air due to evaporation. You can also cover part of the tank with a damp towel which will bring temps down a bit.
    Thanks a lot! (no sarcasm intended, I'm serious)

    Sent from my vivo 1601 using Tapatalk

  14. #20
    BPnet Veteran SDA's Avatar
    Join Date
    08-25-2017
    Location
    West Tennessee
    Posts
    1,559
    Thanks
    220
    Thanked 1,478 Times in 824 Posts
    I second that if you are unable to provide adequate conditions for a ball python to live in and not just survive for whatever reason, you should do the right thing and surrender them before you end up frustrated and guilty feeling because something unwanted happened.

    You must provide minimum condition for temperature and humidity. If you cannot provide that externally via the temps in your house then you must provide it through heating means in the enclosure.

    What you are doing now is causing harm to these snakes and how you keep them now will not be conditions that are survivable. These are not temperate climate species like some corn snakes, they are subtropic snakes that require a specific range of temperature that the vast majority of people can not provide simply by being lucky enough to live in a region of the world that mimics their native conditions.
    1.0 ♂ 2010 Spider BP 'Dante'
    1.0 ♂ 2017 Bay of LA Rosy Boa 'Queso'
    0.0.1 2017 Aru GTP 'Ganja'
    1.0 ♂ Blue Tick Coonhound 'Blue'

    1.0 ♂ 2018 Basset Hound 'Cooper'

  15. The Following User Says Thank You to SDA For This Useful Post:

    Tonald Drump (10-27-2017)

Page 2 of 3 FirstFirst 123 LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v4.2.1