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  1. #1
    Ball Python Aficionado Adam Chandler's Avatar
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    Marking Hatchlings

    I've heard when you first sex babies you can mark them with a paint marker to keep track of individuals until you separate them. Is this true? I figure its safe and the paint would just come off during a shed. But the paint marker doesn't irritate the skin or anything does it?
    "We are artists using locus and alleles as our paint; the ball python as our canvas" - Colin Weaver


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  2. #2
    Registered User Hilltop's Avatar
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    good question

  3. #3
    BPnet Veteran A.VinczeBPs's Avatar
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    Re: Marking Hatchlings

    Depends on the brand and type. I know BHB used a silver paint marker to mark them, but I don't know what type they use.
    Send an email asking him, he'll answer next day usually. (maybe 2-3 days)

  4. #4
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    Re: Marking Hatchlings

    Quote Originally Posted by A.VinczeBPs View Post
    Depends on the brand and type. I know BHB used a silver paint marker to mark them, but I don't know what type they use.
    Send an email asking him, he'll answer next day usually. (maybe 2-3 days)
    Brian uses standard paint pens. Nothing special at all. They dont absorb in the scales/skin and sheds/washes off.

    I personally dont mark anything except the tags on the tubs.

  5. #5
    BPnet Veteran seeya205's Avatar
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    I would ask Brian at BHB! You will need a paint pen that is non toxic!

  6. #6
    BPnet Veteran wax32's Avatar
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    Dunno 'bout paint pens and such (any non-toxic ones should work fine tho), but what I do it throw males in one tub and females in another tub. Works just fine for my corn snakes.
    - Dave Harms - www.wax32.com | Pinstripe, Yellow Belly, Sulfur, Cinnamon ph G-Stripe, Pastel het Hypo | Pastel, Fire, Albino, Mojave, Lesser Platinum ph G-Stripe, Pastel ph G-Stripe, het G-Stripe, het Hypo, het Piebald, Pastel Yellowbelly

  7. #7
    BPnet Veteran mykee's Avatar
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    Re: Marking Hatchlings

    What is the point of 'marking' a ball python?
    Once the entire clutch is out of their eggs, you sex them all.
    You put the boys in one bin, you put the girls in another bin.
    You mark the bins as follows:
    Boys (you put the boys in those).
    Girls (you put the girls in those).
    No need to 'marker' up your balls.

  8. #8
    Ball Python Aficionado Adam Chandler's Avatar
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    Re: Marking Hatchlings

    ...I'm not trying to give the impression that I can't figure out to put males in one tub and females in the another. I'm talking about special circumstances like I just ran into when I wanted to mark the one female in the bin that hadn't eaten.
    I remember a while back watching a video on youtube where a guy there needed to mark a specific hatchling put a small mark on its back with a paint pen and said it doesn't hurt anything and comes right off with a shed. I just would like to make sure that is true.
    "We are artists using locus and alleles as our paint; the ball python as our canvas" - Colin Weaver


    Check out my Photoblog!

  9. #9
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    Re: Marking Hatchlings

    Quote Originally Posted by Agent73 View Post
    ...I'm not trying to give the impression that I can't figure out to put males in one tub and females in the another. I'm talking about special circumstances like I just ran into when I wanted to mark the one female in the bin that hadn't eaten.
    I remember a while back watching a video on youtube where a guy there needed to mark a specific hatchling put a small mark on its back with a paint pen and said it doesn't hurt anything and comes right off with a shed. I just would like to make sure that is true.
    Once they are sexed you can put them in thier own separate tubs, put tags on each tub identifying them as male or female. And use a feeding card to keep track if its eaten, pooped,pee, shed. No reason to mark a snake if its not eaten or not.

  10. #10
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    Currently what i use fore EVERY snake the day they are hatched and sexed.


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