» Site Navigation
2 members and 1,997 guests
Most users ever online was 9,191, 03-09-2025 at 12:17 PM.
» Today's Birthdays
» Stats
Members: 75,887
Threads: 249,087
Posts: 2,572,045
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, Saexs
|
View Poll Results: Your opinion on breeding young / small females
- Voters
- 326. You may not vote on this poll
-
Go ahead and try them. They will go if they are ready.
-
No, you should wait until they are older, and larger.
-
Re: Opinions on breeding young / small females
 Originally Posted by Kryptonian
I would rather wait till shes at least 2-3 years and 1500+ grams. I think, whats the hurry? If you are in it for the hobby then it will be worth the wait then you know you have a nice healthy mature female who will give you a nice healthy clutch of eggs that will hopefully hatch some good sized healthy babies. Sounds like more fun that way then breeding to small and then worrying about the female. I dont power feed for the same reason. I want my girls big and muscular and in perfect shape to have babies, not fat from over feeding just so they look big. Each one of my girls is a pet not just for breedng and Id feel awful if one got sick becuase i bred her to soon.
The big hurry is creating a new morph that I do not have, and also producing morphs to sell. For example, this year I have a pastel het ghost female that is approximately 1200 grams and 1.5 years old. I also have a pastel ghost to breed to her. Some people would wait to breed her until the following year. I decided to breed her this year. If she goes for me, then I could possibly produce super pastel ghosts this season as opposed to waiting until next season. I am also in the same boat with a het pied female and a pied male. If she goes for me, then I could produce pieds this season. I do not feel that it in any way harms the females. So why wait? In my opinion, if the females are ready, then they will give me eggs. If they are not, then they will not.
Eddie Strong, Jr. 
-
-
Re: Opinions on breeding young / small females
 Originally Posted by 771subliminal
if you look at people grown women that have perfectly healthy babies and no problem with child birth range from our little people of 3ft to women of 7ft+ and all most likely will birth a avg size new born baby.
Please please please do not compare human fertility to ball python fertility. Humans being primates we are by definition mammals and therefore don't lay eggs. This makes our reproduction different enough that I think any comparison is going to be pointless.
That being said woman die during child birth all the time and many many more would if not for expert medical care. Extremely young women as well as extremely old woman (over 35, sorry ladies) put themselves and there unborn children at greater risk. Weight also plays a huge role in woman's fertility.
I am not making any judgment calls here at all. I just think you have to ask yourself why you are doing what you are doing and see how you feel about it.
Personally I would not breed a female BP until her 3rd breeding season and only after she was over 1500 grams. I base this solely on the prevailing wisdom of books I have read and sites like this. I am not in the habit of rolling the dice with my animals health and well being.
-
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Egapal For This Useful Post:
-
Re: Opinions on breeding young / small females
I'd breed them if it was breeding season and the snake was 1500g or larger, regardless of age. And if a snake was 2 years old. plump, but short and was only 1200g, I'd breed her.
Ball Pythons 1.1 Lesser, Pastel
1.0 Lesser Pastel, 0.0.7 mixed babies
-
-
Registered User
-
-
Re: Opinions on breeding young / small females
Haha, yeah. It is more about the shape and size. I remember hearing that 500g times each foot of their body length is a good way to figure out if they are safe to breed. So if your snake is 2~3 foot you could probably safely breed under 1500g, but if you have a 5' female you should probably not breed her at 1500g.
Ball Pythons 1.1 Lesser, Pastel
1.0 Lesser Pastel, 0.0.7 mixed babies
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Oxylepy For This Useful Post:
-
Re: Opinions on breeding young / small females
I have had it happen wit hno problem but the female in question was only 1300 grams. IT was also an unplanned event since i had to treat the room for mite and only had her and cage mate about 3 weeks. I was possible she was already gravid when I got them. I had ot treat the entire colelction for mites cause I had some on some cloths and they migrated into the snake room on me ( I used my bedroom as aqt room cause lack of proper space for a qt room)and had to do cage cleaning that mornig and a mite was on my cloths which causea population explosion in the snake room and I had to place all the snake inpillow cases and in the same room.
anyhow there are a lot of possible issues that can show up during the time she carrying the eggs and after she lays them. it hard, egg binding is one of the major ones. I also had the snake adopted out befoer she laid and the guy was waiting for her to drop to pick her up, I only let her go after she ate 3 times since i took the eggs and used an incubator.
Was married to 4theSNAKElady (still wish we were)
Ball pythons
0.1 pieds 1.0 banana pied
0.1 het pied
3.1 sugar gliders ( non breeding pets)
-
-
Registered User
Re: Opinions on breeding young / small females
I didn't read the 5 pages of this thread, just chiming in.
My experience has been this.
I breed 2 year old females all the time with success that are around the 1500g mark and are "stout".
I have never had good success breeding 2 year old females that are 1200g mark or are not "stout".
-d
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Damon Theis For This Useful Post:
-
Re: Opinions on breeding young / small females
Without reading all the prevous posts...
I have produced from 1100g females before, had nice hatchlings... And still regretted it. Reason: I feed her back up really hood and if I'm lucky she get up to 1300-1400g for the next season. So I get another tiny clutch from her. The same goes for the next season.
Point is that I have jumped the gun and now I'll fall behind in the long run as the bigger girls are giving normal and large clutches.
Justin
-
The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to jkobylka For This Useful Post:
AlexisFitzy (03-01-2015),scutechute (08-12-2009),Wh00h0069 (08-11-2009)
-
Re: Opinions on breeding young / small females
 Originally Posted by jkobylka
Without reading all the prevous posts...
I have produced from 1100g females before, had nice hatchlings... And still regretted it. Reason: I feed her back up really hood and if I'm lucky she get up to 1300-1400g for the next season. So I get another tiny clutch from her. The same goes for the next season.
Point is that I have jumped the gun and now I'll fall behind in the long run as the bigger girls are giving normal and large clutches.
Justin
Hi Justin, thanks for you insight. From my understanding, what you described seems to be the consensus. Breeding smaller females can be done, but may not be the best in the long run not because their health but because it will take longer for them to start laying large clutches.
Eddie Strong, Jr. 
-
-
Re: Opinions on breeding young / small females
I shoot for the 40 inch mark with my up and coming females. If they don't make it, they get another year.
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|