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Re: The Shedding Process
Alrighty....the pictures are fixed and I removed the broken link to other articles. I had to put up the full size images instead of thumbnails because our nifty new program that automatically resizes oversized images is overriding the old thumbnail/url reference.
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Registered User
Re: The Shedding Process
awesome post. i have had my corn for almost a year now, and ive never actually seen him shed! sneaky thing does it while im sleeping every time! he must be shy.
**Katie**
1.0 Amel Corn snake (Sam)
0.0.1 Crested Gecko (Kamikaze)
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Registered User
Re: The Shedding Process
Thank you for the pictures . Very informative.
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Registered User
Re: The Shedding Process
I'm nervous about my snakes shed. I am having a very difficult time keeping the humidity where its supposed to be at.. actually i'm having a very difficult time keeping it above 50%. I spray the cage ith warm water about 3-4 times a day and it may reach 65% if i'm lucky. He has been actually shedding for about a week now and im getting nervous. I read that you could use a rag and help with the process but he hisses when I do that. I dont really know what to do.
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Re: The Shedding Process
Do a search on "humid hides". If you setup a good humid hide, you won't have to keep misting. Best solution in my opinion.
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Registered User
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Re: The Shedding Process
Hi,
I would have a quick read through the caresheet to get an idea of what we normally recommend.
What are you using to measure your humidity? We normally recommend the acurite digital weatherstation with probe from wallmart for about $12.
It is traditionally a right pain in the situpons to get the temps and humidity right in larger enclosures - and trying to do it in an enclosure also housing a green iguana and box turtles would probably drive me insane.
I would try and keep his enclosure simple and easy to keep spotless until he has recovered - I would recommend newspaper or paper towels as a substrate as they are easiest to see when it needs cleaned and by their very nature demand a total cleanout every time.
They are cheap enough that this is not a problem however.
Make sure anything you apply topically does not contain painkillers as they are known to be toxic to BP's.
Keep to the clean setup untill he has shed at least once and the open wounds are gone - it generally takes a few sheds as the sheddig process itself can sometimes re-open scabbed over wounds.
Look for the post on treating the screen top to see if that is something you can do and think about making a humid hide if there seems to be no other way to get the required levels of both temp and humidity.
I'm sure I have forgotten something but others will chime in to help.
In the meantime I will copy this into a thread of its own to better help you get the replies needed.
dr del
Derek
7 adult Royals (2.5), 1.0 COS Pastel, 1.0 Enchi, 1.1 Lesser platty Royal python, 1.1 Black pastel Royal python, 0.1 Blue eyed leucistic ( Super lesser), 0.1 Piebald Royal python, 1.0 Sinaloan milk snake 1.0 crested gecko and 1 bad case of ETS. no wife, no surprise.
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Registered User
Re: The Shedding Process
My ball python is going through his first shed cycle since I've had him, and this post has been extremely helpful! Thank You!
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Registered User
Re: The Shedding Process
This was the most helpful thing when my python went through her first shed with me. Ecdysis is an amazing process and your description and pictures make it so that anyone can understand what's going on and know what to expect. Thank you!
I have(hopefully had) a big problem with humidity and she started having a bad shed. I put her in 4" of slightly warm water. After soaking for a few minutes, I added an upside-down hiding log. She explored the log, then went underneath it and used the weight and rough bark of the log to start crawling out. After a while she decided that it was enough and found her way out. The rest shed off in one piece overnight.
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