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Thread: multiple snakes

  1. #11
    BPnet Lifer Skiploder's Avatar
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    Re: multiple snakes

    Quote Originally Posted by LGray23 View Post
    <waits patiently for the torches and pitchforks...>

    Not a good idea, don't be cheap just buy a separate enclosure lol I've heard a million times and live by it:

    There are a ton of ways to save money on your ball pythons, but don't save when it comes to their safety.

    Ask any of the "bigtime" breeders what they think about housing together, I bet they'll say "sure, if you want ALL of your snakes dead". Sickness doesn't just show up, and once you notice it, it'll be too late and then ALL your snakes will have it.
    Have you asked any big time breeders this?

    I didn't think so...............because if you had, you wouldn't have posted what you did.

    Just so everyone is clear on this, some breeders cohabitate snakes. Period. Some of you who know no better can flap your gums all day that they don't, but that doesn't change the fact that they do. Some species breed easier if kept as pairs.

    As for sick snakes - most breeders keep them in rack systems in which snakes are housed together in little tubs mere inches from each other.

    Sickness will easily spread in rack systems and snake rooms even if *gasp* the animals are housed separately. Many viruses and some of the more aggressive bacteria don't respect a 1/4" of chinese plastic.

    Only proper quarantine and veterinary examinations prevent the spread of most ophidian pathogens. After that, you can put them in the same room or tub together.

    As for cannibalism - there is a difference between snakes that are truly ophiophagus and stupid bone-headed feeding mistakes that result in the accidental ingestion of a tank/tub mate.

    Ball pythons are not naturally ophiophagus. But if a keeper is too ignorant to properly separate tank mates before feeding, then there is definitely an increased risk that one roommate may accidentally eat the other. Again, like the big "they'll both get sick if you house them together!" bugaboo, this is a risk than can be completely mitigated if the keeper utilizes an iota of common sense.

    So when people claim ball pythons are cannibalistic - it's really a crock of crap. Balls have been known to eat other balls in rare (yes rare) instances where the keeper was too inexperienced to know better than to separate them at supper time.

    Here's the cookie-cutter bit of advice to the OP - don't keep your snakes together. Not because it can't be done or isn't done successfully, but because it requires elevated husbandry skills, added care and added vigilance - most of which can't be imparted on a reptile forum.

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  3. #12
    BPnet Lifer Skittles1101's Avatar
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    There's a big difference between cohabitating snakes to breed together (which clearly big time breeders DO), but cohabitating same sex snakes for the fun of it? Yes I am quite sure they don't do. Ask a breeder how many of their snakes in the racks get sick all at the same time in the same area, there's quite a few. Now imagine if all those snakes lived in the same exclosure, then, clearly, they'd ALL be sick....not just the bunch in the racks. For someone acusing people of "flapping their gums" you sure do it quite quicker. I don't retract my post, or edit it, except maybe use smaller words so people understand what I meant, who are quick to point the finger
    Last edited by Skittles1101; 03-24-2011 at 08:00 AM.
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  4. #13
    BPnet Veteran Wh00h0069's Avatar
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    Re: multiple snakes

    I have housed two carpets together successfully, but do not generally house snakes together. My main reasons are feeding and health issues.

    I have had two incidents where I accidentally fed breeding snakes, which could have, in both cases been disastrous. I fed feed an adult female boa a rat without realizing that there was an adult male in the cage with her. Needless to say, they both grabbed one end of the rat. It was extremely hard to get the male unlatched. I got lucky. The other incident was a breeding ball python pair. I threw a live rat into the tub. The female grabbed on to it. Luckily I realized I made the mistake right away, and snatched the male up quickly.

    The health concerns are apparent. If one gets sick, the other will likely catch it.

    Although I do not generally house snakes together, I do not tell people that they shouldn’t. As long as they feed outside of the enclosure, or remove one snake before feeding, then the feeding issue should be taken care of. They should also take extra precautions to ensure the snakes are healthy before adding another snake.
    Eddie Strong, Jr.

  5. #14
    BPnet Lifer Skiploder's Avatar
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    Re: multiple snakes

    Quote Originally Posted by LGray23 View Post
    There's a big difference between cohabitating snakes to breed together (which clearly big time breeders DO), but cohabitating same sex snakes for the fun of it? Yes I am quite sure they don't do. Ask a breeder how many of their snakes in the racks get sick all at the same time in the same area, there's quite a few. Now imagine if all those snakes lived in the same exclosure, then, clearly, they'd ALL be sick....not just the bunch in the racks. For someone acusing people of "flapping their gums" you sure do it quite quicker. I don't retract my post, or edit it, except maybe use smaller words so people understand what I meant, who are quick to point the finger


    If it will help you understand my posts better, I will gladly use monosyllabic words......just ask.

    Your post reveals just how little you know on the subject. That's not a crime. Some species will NOT mate or do worse if you do not co-habitate them together year round.

    Snakes do not get magically sick out of the blue. They get sick when they are kept improperly or introduced to new animals that are not properly quarantined or treated for parasites. Again, most people don't quarantine their new arrivals correctly - I bet more than half the people on this forum have never really quarantined a new arrival. No need to get all hot and bothered for not knowing that.

    But you are regurgitating crap you have read by posters who are regurgitating crap they have read. You are offering opinions based not on actual experience, but word of mouth. That's very dangerous when it comes to giving advice. Be very sure of what you are advising before you advise it.........

    What is truly regrettable is that despite not really knowing what you are talking about, you are continuing to assert that you cannot house two snakes together. You are attempting to deflect that lack of knowledge by referring to these mythical "big breeders" who don't do it, and who also offer dire warnings of doom to anyone who does.

    The FACT is that many people do it - experienced herpers and breeders alike who have done it for years. As I said, some species will not breed or accept a mate unless co-habitated.

    The FACT is that while we do it, we also caution against doing it. Again, not because it CAN'T be done or shouldn't be done, but because it requires knowledge and experience to do it successfully.

    In the case of some species, it is actually a giant pain in the ass that, in order to breed them, you have to keep them together year round. Try separating and reintroducing some highly toxic rear fanged animals every week, for years on end. Not something I would elect to do, but need to so that I can produce babies.

    So, in the case of the OP, he probably should avoid doing it. But get it through your head that this doesn't mean that doing it is a bad thing, or something to avoid or a husbandry no-no, or something that the rock star big breeders don't do.

    Are you starting to get it now? Your initial advice to the OP was correct - in his case it shouldn't be done. The reasons you followed up on were wrong.
    Last edited by Skiploder; 03-24-2011 at 08:29 AM.

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  7. #15
    BPnet Lifer Skittles1101's Avatar
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    Okay....

    When you can point out anywhere in any of my postings where I said they CANNOT be housed together, I will gladly answer any questions you have. From what I see, I said it's not a good idea, along with 95% of other people who own ball pythons. BUT if you saw something that I didn't type, or magically showed up, then I'll gladly apologize for the misunderstanding.

    Let's try this again, just to be clear.

    The breeders that I have become very close friends with, who have years of their and others (including big name breeders) experience, who I then gain my knowledge from by asking questions, wouldn't even consider putting two same sex snakes in the same exclosure.

    CAN it be done? Clearly, since you pointed that out.
    SHOULD it be done? Obviously...debatable.
    SHOULD it be done by anyone other than someone who has many years of experience? In my opinion (key word here), no.
    You, who clearly knows all, should be able to see the difference between opinion and fact.
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  8. #16
    BPnet Lifer Skittles1101's Avatar
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    And I should probably point out that when I said "snakes" I did NOT mean all breeds, since this is in the ball python section I assumed people would understand I meant ball pythons, shame on me for assuming.
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  9. #17
    BPnet Lifer Skiploder's Avatar
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    Re: multiple snakes

    Quote Originally Posted by LGray23 View Post
    Okay....

    When you can point out anywhere in any of my postings where I said they CANNOT be housed together, I will gladly answer any questions you have. From what I see, I said it's not a good idea, along with 95% of other people who own ball pythons. BUT if you saw something that I didn't type, or magically showed up, then I'll gladly apologize for the misunderstanding.

    Let's try this again, just to be clear.

    The breeders that I have become very close friends with, who have years of their and others (including big name breeders) experience, who I then gain my knowledge from by asking questions, wouldn't even consider putting two same sex snakes in the same exclosure.

    CAN it be done? Clearly, since you pointed that out.
    SHOULD it be done? Obviously...debatable.
    SHOULD it be done by anyone other than someone who has many years of experience? In my opinion (key word here), no.
    You, who clearly knows all, should be able to see the difference between opinion and fact.
    Ah, I think the misunderstanding lies in the fact that while I quoted your post, I was addressing other people who posted in this thread. You are correct, you did not say you CANNOT house them together - you strongly advised against it, but for completely different reasons than I do.

    When it comes to sick snakes, I still take exception to your post. I have been keeping snakes for over three decades, and while my knowledge of snakes is far from all encompassing, I can tell you the number of outbreaks of disease I have had in that time:

    1 - and it was due to a disease than cannot be quarantined away or 100% found by even multiple tests.

    I currently have less than 25 animals, but that's the lowest I've had in a long, long time. For a period of time, I was importing quite a few WC snakes from Africa and elsewhere and never had an outbreak of anything.

    I also keep rhamps, thrasops, and pseustes in breeding pairs. In the past I have kept spilotes and various antaresia in continual pairings and have never had an issue. I have even had cribos that would not breed unless kept year round - all without issue - be it cannibalism or disease.

    Therefore when it comes to this notion that properly quarantined and treated snakes get sick out of the blue and infect their room/tank mates, I feel fairly qualified to speak out of experience.

    I also personally know quite a few big name breeders who wouldn't know proper quarantine if it bit them in the ass. How do I know? I've sold to a few over the years. Yep, they receive a box of baby cribos on Friday and on Monday they are posting them for sale. There are many members of that group that are rightfully wary of snake diseases - mainly because they have collections that are constantly exposed to new, unquarantined arrivals.

    The issue I had with your original post is that it implies that cohabitating properly quarantined animals together will result (so say the big box breeders) in an a bunch of dead animals. Nothing could be further than the truth.

    The biggest problem in cohabitating ball pythons is that they are easily stressed. But many people remove them and feed them in separate containers which is also stressful so go figure................

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  11. #18
    Sometimes It Hurts... PitOnTheProwl's Avatar
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    Re: multiple snakes

    Quote Originally Posted by Skiploder View Post
    If it will help you understand my posts better, I will gladly use monosyllabic words......just ask.
    So, What I have gathered from your so useful posts today are:
    1- you know it all
    2- you know how to properly spell big words (thank spell check)
    3- you are know how to make a newby more insecure about their situation
    4- you can REALLY make yourself look like an *hat* quickly

    To the OP, there are some here more experienced than others and there there are those that just like to see themselves type (if you know what I mean)
    Feel free to keep asking your questions and expanding your knowledge, we all need to learn from each other. Even if it is learning when to keep our browsers shut.

  12. #19
    BPnet Lifer Skittles1101's Avatar
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    Re: multiple snakes

    Quote Originally Posted by Skiploder View Post
    Ah, I think the misunderstanding lies in the fact that while I quoted your post, I was addressing other people who posted in this thread. You are correct, you did not say you CANNOT house them together - you strongly advised against it, but for completely different reasons than I do.

    When it comes to sick snakes, I still take exception to your post. I have been keeping snakes for over three decades, and while my knowledge of snakes is far from all encompassing, I can tell you the number of outbreaks of disease I have had in that time:

    1 - and it was due to a disease than cannot be quarantined away or 100% found by even multiple tests.

    I currently have less than 25 animals, but that's the lowest I've had in a long, long time. For a period of time, I was importing quite a few WC snakes from Africa and elsewhere and never had an outbreak of anything.

    I also keep rhamps, thrasops, and pseustes in breeding pairs. In the past I have kept spilotes and various antaresia in continual pairings and have never had an issue. I have even had cribos that would not breed unless kept year round - all without issue - be it cannibalism or disease.

    Therefore when it comes to this notion that properly quarantined and treated snakes get sick out of the blue and infect their room/tank mates, I feel fairly qualified to speak out of experience.

    I also personally know quite a few big name breeders who wouldn't know proper quarantine if it bit them in the ass. How do I know? I've sold to a few over the years. Yep, they receive a box of baby cribos on Friday and on Monday they are posting them for sale. There are many members of that group that are rightfully wary of snake diseases - mainly because they have collections that are constantly exposed to new, unquarantined arrivals.

    The issue I had with your original post is that it implies that cohabitating properly quarantined animals together will result (so say the big box breeders) in an a bunch of dead animals. Nothing could be further than the truth.

    The biggest problem in cohabitating ball pythons is that they are easily stressed. But many people remove them and feed them in separate containers which is also stressful so go figure................
    And while I agree that that ball pythons stress easily, I'm not sure anyone can say 100% that it's the biggest problem. I was just saying that in my experience, in horror stories I've heard, in people I've talked to, in the countless hours I've spent researching between books-internet-asking direct questions to big breeders, that if snakes can get killed off by the dozen in racks, what do you think will happen if they are kept together? That was my only comment, and you distorted it or misinterpreted it to say that "it is NEVER a good idea to house together." Which is not what I meant. Also IMO you are very quick to shoot people down who are trying to help, over little details that you misinterpreted.
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  13. #20
    BPnet Lifer Skiploder's Avatar
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    Re: multiple snakes

    Quote Originally Posted by LGray23 View Post
    And while I agree that that ball pythons stress easily, I'm not sure anyone can say 100% that it's the biggest problem. I was just saying that in my experience, in horror stories I've heard, in people I've talked to, in the countless hours I've spent researching between books-internet-asking direct questions to big breeders, that if snakes can get killed off by the dozen in racks, what do you think will happen if they are kept together? That was my only comment, and you distorted it or misinterpreted it to say that "it is NEVER a good idea to house together." Which is not what I meant. Also IMO you are very quick to shoot people down who are trying to help, over little details that you misinterpreted.
    I'm still not misinterpreting what you are claiming on disease. In properly quarantined and kept animals - it's not a factor.

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