Quote Originally Posted by Skiploder View Post
I've made this offer before and it still stands:

Anyone who thinks that bin feeding is the way to go is welcome to come visit me when they are in my neck of the woods.

They can then take over feeding day duties in the snake house. They can try moving the hungry cribos and indigos into bins, feed them, and then move them back. Pay careful attention to 12 lb Mojo the black tail and the psychotic yellow tail Zeppo. Zeppo is the reason I had to get stitches on my middle finger........

If we still have all our fingers and have not gone to the ER we can move on up to the hydrodynastes, and then the thrasops.

Some of the thrasops are not cohabitated and I do bin feed the females every three days. For the ones that are, my guests are invited to try out their mad hook skills getting the females into their bins. I always enjoy watching a self-proclaimed hook jedi get a dose of reality trying to hook a pissed off lightning fast, venomous arboreal colubrid.

Anyone who can run the feeding day gauntlet shuttling 30+ snakes into bins without getting bit and without cheating and wearing gloves will leave here with a spare Boaphile 5 drawer 28qt rack.

Now I'm curious, why does it matter if a venomous snake is cage agressive? It's not like i'd be holding them anyway. If I had 30+ snakes, i'd split feeding day into 2, feeding half on say Tuesday and half on Thursday. I see the reason you are against bin feeding, you have too many snakes to make it viable/ efficent. That still doesn't make it wrong for anyone else to bin feed, and I have never seen nor heard of any problems arise from bin feeding. All of my current animals are we'll socialized and love to come out of their enclosures.