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Welcome to our newest member, coda
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BPnet Veteran
Looks like she's hunting
My new BP has settled in and has eaten twice. A live baby rat both times and about ten days apart. Her last feeding was Tuesday night and she chilled in her hide for the usual day or so. But here's my question... She has been, what I can only describe as, hunting. She hides behind one of her hides where she caught the last rat, poking her head around one side then the other, and then over the top. Always coiled and ready to strike. When she's not doing that, she is hanging from her branch with her head ready to strike just above the spot where she caught the rat. Do you think she is still hungry and I should up her feeding amount/times? Or is she just finally settled in enough to act like a snake?
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BPnet Veteran
Re: Looks like she's hunting
Are you talking like a pinky? I would think she's still hungry. Have you tried fuzzies?
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BPnet Veteran
Re: Looks like she's hunting
One appropriate sized prey item a week is good. Otherwise she is just being a bp thats all.
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BPnet Veteran
Re: Looks like she's hunting
Not pinkies. She is about twenty inches long and about an inch around. I gave her rat pups almost the same size around as her.
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BPnet Veteran
Re: Looks like she's hunting
I feed my hatchling every 5 days until she gets to about 200g. Then I can start feeding adult mice once a week for a long time. I have done it with both my BP's. 10 days is too long I would try a weekly schedule. Easier to remember and snakes work good on routine.
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Re: Looks like she's hunting
We feed every 5 days until the hatchling reaches 200 grams as well. Then they go to every 7 days.
Usually on the night before and the day of feeding (we feed in the evening) I will see the snakes out and about. Some will use the hide to peek around, some will lurk where their body is in the hide but their head is out watching from the doorway of the hide, some will crawl up on top of the hide and watch for prey to walk by. My really big females just coil up out in plain sight and give me the "hey lady, drop in my rat will ya!" glare LOL. I like to see them out, alert and ready to hunt this way.
By the time we put in their live prey they are all primed and hit their dinner within seconds.
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