Gio,
All I heard was "you want me to explain that? lol"
You keep pounding how I keep two snakes together for disease spreading issues, but I already explained, these have been together at the same petstore, likely from the same breeder. If they have disease it is likely both, and it is for me to find out and treat. I have worked at a wholesale facility and worked under import conditions, managing disease is nothing for myself but understandable to someone new, and repeating myself either way they are already together at the petstore.
With that aside I just wanted to know why you thought juveniles should not be housed together. You acted like many reasons, so was just curious. lol does not explain that to me, or help those new to the hobby understand why.
It is actually breeders and the US that I found this information and now in my previous post someone in the UK. Now I feel like I am the one talking to the wall. You hear what you want to hear.Funny that you mention breeders then doubt practiced, proven, and accepted methods of care for carpet pythons written by experienced breeders and herpetologists that have studied these animals.
I am glad you understand there are brooding species, that is much different than "snakes are solitary". Since you understand "biological" influences, then you understand evolution is not black/white but grey. So differentiating two types of snakes makes little since. Can you at least see based on many discussions and observations of Carpets, that they are a bit closer to communal than say a snake that eats other snakes?Brooding snakes (insert species) VS. carpet pythons? Very different, and carpets are not noted for brooding or paring up in mass prior to breeding.
I am sorry, but I think you will keep talking in circles because you have not observed Carpets yourself, only basing this on a general understanding of snakes?








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