Quote Originally Posted by SlitherinSisters View Post
The guy just opened up his own pet shop in a small town not terribly far from me. He ordered 9 babies from a distributor in CA, I never heard of them, so I forgot their name by the time I tried to look them up. He said he purchased a bunch of reptiles and supplies from them, 6k worth! But those BP babies are dying left and right. He's had them less than 2 weeks and 5 of the 9 have already died. 2 of which he had sold and the people came back to get a refund. I tried asking him questions, but he's not familiar with ball pythons. He doesn't think they looked thin or orange-I told him some people/distributors will dip bps in Iodine. I'm guessing they were imports or maybe domestic and hadn't ate if they are already dying??? His temp is 87 on the hot side and 75 min on the cool side. He keeps his shop at 75 because he breeds hedgehogs and they need higher temps apparently. He's using some sort of slab rocks stacked, or something, so there is room for all the bps to hide in.

I have NO clue what sort of advice to give him! Does anyone else have some ideas? He said two of the four left have eaten, but the other two haven't. I told him to assist feed the two that aren't eating that way if they die at least he tried to do something! I'm thinking they are probably thin and he just doesn't know that a thin bp is bad, not normal. IDK....I've got nothing. I also told him if it were me I would put them in tubs for awhile, but I don't think he was too keen on that idea.

I'm not really looking for advice for him, more for me because it's driving me nuts wondering why they are all dying. My guess is that it's probably already too late for the 4 left.
Well if all else fails, to the trickery for the feeding offer them small ASF's or if that fails offer them small gerbils. Something anything at this point if this is what seems to be the case of them really needing to eat because they are dieing. . My female normal hadn't eaten a thing for nearly 2 months and started looking sickly but a gerbil sparked her and now she's back on regular feedings. Just a thought.