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  1. #1
    BPnet Veteran ed4281's Avatar
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    Cage aggression question please help

    I rescued a king snake that was surrendered at work (an animal hospital, people always dump their animals with us) about 2 months ago. He is 2 years old and really undersized and thin. I have been feeding him 2 rat fuzzies every week and he is eating great and getting bigger. Lately though he has been very cage aggressive to the point where I have to hook him to get him out to move him to his feeding bin. This is a complete 180 from when I first got him he was so sweet. What is causing this and please tell me how to fix it, he is a beautiful Lavender albino banana and I would like to be able to hold him more, however he thinks he’s a cobra or something.
    Currently have
    2.3 pastel's
    0.1 spider
    0.1 normal
    1.1 100% het albino's
    1.0 Albino ( he will live at work but i get to take care of him)
    1.0 Cinnamon
    1.0 Fire

  2. #2
    BPnet Veteran ed4281's Avatar
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    Re: Cage aggression question please help

    Any imput?
    Currently have
    2.3 pastel's
    0.1 spider
    0.1 normal
    1.1 100% het albino's
    1.0 Albino ( he will live at work but i get to take care of him)
    1.0 Cinnamon
    1.0 Fire

  3. #3
    BPnet Veteran blushingball419's Avatar
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    Re: Cage aggression question please help

    Well, it's hard to say. At least with my limited experience with my little guy, most kings seem to have crazy attitudes. Very nervous and highstrung, especially when they're younger. If he was neglected by his previous owners he could just have some personality issues, and if he wasn't fed properly he could just be thinking about food all the time, no matter how much you feed him.

    What kind of substrate are you using? I've found that kings love to burrow, and if you're only using newspaper then maybe he doesn't feel secure enough. But if your husbandry is good and hasn't changed at all, then I'd say he could finally be showing his real personality now that he's gotten used to you. The only real way to fix it is just to handle him more, and definitely wear some good, thick gloves and long sleeved shirts. Maybe you'll find that once you get him away from his tank and he realizes there's no food around, he'll calm down.
    ~ Erin ~

    somewhat damaged

    0.1 normal ball "Karma"
    1.0 albino ball "Reznor"
    1.0 brazilian rainbow boa "Helix"
    1.1 corns - bloodred "Jambi", creamsicle okeetee "Aurora"
    1.0 striped california king "Nix"
    0.1 yellow tiger crested gecko "Ember"

  4. #4
    BPnet Veteran Egapal's Avatar
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    Re: Cage aggression question please help

    Quote Originally Posted by ed4281 View Post
    I rescued a king snake that was surrendered at work (an animal hospital, people always dump their animals with us) about 2 months ago. He is 2 years old and really undersized and thin. I have been feeding him 2 rat fuzzies every week and he is eating great and getting bigger. Lately though he has been very cage aggressive to the point where I have to hook him to get him out to move him to his feeding bin. This is a complete 180 from when I first got him he was so sweet. What is causing this and please tell me how to fix it, he is a beautiful Lavender albino banana and I would like to be able to hold him more, however he thinks he’s a cobra or something.
    Well I guess I have thought about cage aggression a lot and I just don't believe that its real. Let me put it this way. If every time you feed your snake you take it out of its cage and put it in a feeding tub then it would make sense to me that every time you go to take your snake out of its cage it will think its feeding time. On the other hand if you feed in the cage then every time a mouse comes in the cage it will think its feeding time and every time your hand comes in the cage it will not associate your hand with feeding. I would say stop feeding your snake in a feeding tub. Feed it in its cage. Then when you go to take your snake out it won't be hungry and hopefully not so aggressive. It just doesn't make any sense to me to put your hand in the cage on feeding day at all.

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  6. #5
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    this is just my opinion,

    i think he wasnt at his full potential when you got him and weak now that he is healthy and back up to what he should have been he isnt to weak to defend himself and or put up a fight now that he isnt in bad conditions

  7. #6
    BPnet Senior Member Brandon Osborne's Avatar
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    Re: Cage aggression question please help

    Quote Originally Posted by Egapal View Post
    Well I guess I have thought about cage aggression a lot and I just don't believe that its real. Let me put it this way. If every time you feed your snake you take it out of its cage and put it in a feeding tub then it would make sense to me that every time you go to take your snake out of its cage it will think its feeding time. On the other hand if you feed in the cage then every time a mouse comes in the cage it will think its feeding time and every time your hand comes in the cage it will not associate your hand with feeding. I would say stop feeding your snake in a feeding tub. Feed it in its cage. Then when you go to take your snake out it won't be hungry and hopefully not so aggressive. It just doesn't make any sense to me to put your hand in the cage on feeding day at all.
    The only problem with this is kingsnakes are opportunistic feeders. They are called kingsnakes because they will generally feed on just about anything they think they can eat...which can include fingers.lol. When the cage is opened, they don't know the difference between a hand and a mouse until it's too late. I used to keep around 100 adult kings and most would fly out of the cage with their mouths open until they realized they weren't being fed. The whole tub/cage feeding scenerio could go either way.

    My guess on this particular situation is just an albino cal king being an albino cal king. In my experience they are by far the most predictably unpredictable kingsnake there is. All of the albino cals I've owned, even those raised from hatchlings, were always biters even well into adulthood. I just learned to expect it from them. I stopped keeping cal kings about 16 years ago.lol. I just got tired of the biting and pooping all over.
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  8. #7
    BPnet Veteran Egapal's Avatar
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    Re: Cage aggression question please help

    Quote Originally Posted by Brandon Osborne View Post
    The only problem with this is kingsnakes are opportunistic feeders. They are called kingsnakes because they will generally feed on just about anything they think they can eat...which can include fingers.lol. When the cage is opened, they don't know the difference between a hand and a mouse until it's too late. I used to keep around 100 adult kings and most would fly out of the cage with their mouths open until they realized they weren't being fed. The whole tub/cage feeding scenerio could go either way.

    My guess on this particular situation is just an albino cal king being an albino cal king. In my experience they are by far the most predictably unpredictable kingsnake there is. All of the albino cals I've owned, even those raised from hatchlings, were always biters even well into adulthood. I just learned to expect it from them. I stopped keeping cal kings about 16 years ago.lol. I just got tired of the biting and pooping all over.
    The only problem with your reply to my post is that I agree with you and you replied as if I didn't. The OP calls this an issue of cage aggression. I definitely think this is an issue of a hungry snake. I am saying that feeding in the cage will fix the problem. The problem being that the snake is aggressive when you take it out of its cage to feed it in a separate tub. Don't do that and the problem goes away. Now you may still have an issue with the snake being aggressive when you just want to handle it, but thats a whole other problem. If we haven't determined that cage aggression is even real then really we are creating one problem to try and solve another problem that its not helping to solve. Feed your snake. Try to handle it when its least hungry. The older it gets and the more you handle it the more it should calm down. If it doesn't then guess what. You have a mean Cal King. They are animals, they each have their own personalities and there is no magic bullet to fixing them. All we can do is practice good husbandry and work with them.

  9. #8
    BPnet Senior Member Brandon Osborne's Avatar
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    Re: Cage aggression question please help

    Quote Originally Posted by Egapal View Post
    The only problem with your reply to my post is that I agree with you and you replied as if I didn't. The OP calls this an issue of cage aggression. I definitely think this is an issue of a hungry snake. I am saying that feeding in the cage will fix the problem. The problem being that the snake is aggressive when you take it out of its cage to feed it in a separate tub. Don't do that and the problem goes away. Now you may still have an issue with the snake being aggressive when you just want to handle it, but thats a whole other problem. If we haven't determined that cage aggression is even real then really we are creating one problem to try and solve another problem that its not helping to solve. Feed your snake. Try to handle it when its least hungry. The older it gets and the more you handle it the more it should calm down. If it doesn't then guess what. You have a mean Cal King. They are animals, they each have their own personalities and there is no magic bullet to fixing them. All we can do is practice good husbandry and work with them.
    Sorry. I'm a bad skimmer and get in a hurry sometimes....especially with my screwed up schedule. I guess my main concern with your first post was that you said the snake would not associate the keepers hand with food if fed in the cage. I just don't think they care what's in their cage. I don't think it has anything to do with aggression but more that kingsnakes will eat every day if you feed them. Anything in their cage that moves is fair game.
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  10. #9
    BPnet Veteran ed4281's Avatar
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    Re: Cage aggression question please help

    Thank you all for your advice, I will try to handle him more on his non feeding days. He is on aspen bedding and loves to borrow. I feed him outside of the cage for two reasons 1) because that was what I thought I was supposed to do based on my research 2) because I don't want him ingesting the aspen. I have him at a hotspot of 87-89 degrees and an ambient temp of 75.

    I guess if he doesn’t get over this he will just be a display snake; he really is very nice looking
    Currently have
    2.3 pastel's
    0.1 spider
    0.1 normal
    1.1 100% het albino's
    1.0 Albino ( he will live at work but i get to take care of him)
    1.0 Cinnamon
    1.0 Fire

  11. #10
    BPnet Veteran Egapal's Avatar
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    Re: Cage aggression question please help

    Quote Originally Posted by ed4281 View Post
    Thank you all for your advice, I will try to handle him more on his non feeding days. He is on aspen bedding and loves to borrow. I feed him outside of the cage for two reasons 1) because that was what I thought I was supposed to do based on my research 2) because I don't want him ingesting the aspen. I have him at a hotspot of 87-89 degrees and an ambient temp of 75.

    I guess if he doesn’t get over this he will just be a display snake; he really is very nice looking
    To answer your to points.

    1.) I would suggest that you do some more research. This forum has a bunch of great threads on feeding in an out of the snakes enclosure.

    2.) Ingesting aspen is not likely to cause any issues. In the wild (not saying all things in the wild are good) snakes will routinely ingest things that get stuck to their prey. If you are still concerned what you can do is place a paper towel in the cage and then feed over the paper towel.

    At the end of the day its all up to you on how you keep your snake. I merely wanted to suggest that feeding in the cage is a real option that many many keepers practice with no ill effects.

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