Vote for BP.Net for the 2013 Forum of the Year! Click here for more info.

» Site Navigation

» Home
 > FAQ

» Online Users: 615

0 members and 615 guests
No Members online
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.

» Today's Birthdays

None

» Stats

Members: 75,916
Threads: 249,118
Posts: 2,572,200
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, Wilson1885
Page 2 of 3 FirstFirst 123 LastLast
Results 11 to 20 of 22

Thread: Monster Pieds?

  1. #11
    Registered User
    Join Date
    09-17-2009
    Location
    Arizona
    Posts
    99
    Thanks
    35
    Thanked 54 Times in 33 Posts
    Images: 2

    Re: Monster Pieds?

    No problems with Pieds eating, growing, thriving, or breeding. Have a look at the clutch records on our web site and you'll see plenty of clutches produced by female Pieds, especially the last few years since more of our holdback visual females have been reaching breeding age. We have produced visual Pied combo's with Pastel, Black Pastel, Spider, Fire, Lesser, and Yellowbelly by breeding the co-dom Het Pied males to visual female Pieds.

    Our Pieds are just like any other ball pythons and the females are typically 1600-1800 grams when they produce their first clutch at ~ 3 years of age. We have had them produce at 2 years of age, but that is from individuals that are very determined to grow... We don't push meals at them hoping to accomplish that. For 2012, most of our breeding females were between 2000 and 3000 grams prior to laying eggs, only one (the oldest) bounces over 3,000 grams. Breeding adult females that gain a few hundred grams a year while producing around 700 grams worth of eggs is good enough for me!

    -Paul

  2. The Following User Says Thank You to PiedPeddler For This Useful Post:

    John1982 (07-06-2012)

  3. #12
    BPnet Royalty John1982's Avatar
    Join Date
    08-13-2010
    Location
    Florida
    Posts
    4,009
    Thanks
    2,496
    Thanked 2,962 Times in 1,669 Posts
    Thank's ya'll.

  4. #13
    Registered User
    Join Date
    06-21-2011
    Location
    Appleton, Wi
    Posts
    77
    Thanks
    2
    Thanked 24 Times in 17 Posts
    Don't know if Het Pieds count but I will give my experience. Both het females are not very good eaters, they may eat 4-5 weeks in a row and then stop for varying amounts of time. My pastel het pied male and female spider het pied started out slow but have become very good feeders and are fianlly putting on some size.
    If you Aren't Living on the Edge, You Are Taking Up Too Much Space!

  5. The Following User Says Thank You to Piebald Dave3 For This Useful Post:

    John1982 (07-06-2012)

  6. #14
    BPnet Veteran BallsUnlimited's Avatar
    Join Date
    12-11-2009
    Location
    Long Island Ny
    Posts
    1,981
    Thanks
    1,105
    Thanked 364 Times in 332 Posts
    My 2009 het pied female is a beast when it comes to feeding an laid her first clutch this year of 6 eggs. she was around 2k grams shes now putting the weight back on with out a problem

    2008 female pied got to 1k grams went off food for 9-10 months an now will eat when ever i offer.

    2010 male pied will eat one small rat weekly but is a very slow grower. Hes only 500-600 grams now an will only miss a meal here an there.


  7. The Following User Says Thank You to BallsUnlimited For This Useful Post:

    John1982 (07-06-2012)

  8. #15
    BPnet Veteran RestlessRobie's Avatar
    Join Date
    08-10-2011
    Posts
    1,576
    Thanks
    363
    Thanked 600 Times in 523 Posts
    Images: 4

    Re: Monster Pieds?

    My 2011 Pied girl is the best eater I have. She would eat until she would explode if I let her She is currently 800G and very healthy. I have had no problems with her and the only time she has gone off feed was when we moved her to an new larger enclosure. She was off feed about 3 weeks and then came back with a vengance.
    Robie


    2.0 Normal Ball Pythons Peek a Boo & Dezmond
    1.0 Black Pewter Ball Python Pepe Le Pewter
    0.1 Piebald Ball Python Slinky
    0.1 Siberian Husky Danadog
    2.5 Fancy Rat's Patch, Robin Hood, Lucky, Lucy, Bolt, Cinnamon, Patcheta
    1.1 Great Kiddo's
    0.1 Wonderful Wife
    1.0 Awesome Dad (me)

  9. The Following User Says Thank You to RestlessRobie For This Useful Post:

    John1982 (07-06-2012)

  10. #16
    BPnet Veteran Serpent_Nirvana's Avatar
    Join Date
    06-15-2009
    Location
    New England
    Posts
    842
    Thanks
    357
    Thanked 303 Times in 216 Posts

    Re: Monster Pieds?

    Quote Originally Posted by Brandon Osborne View Post
    I would have to question a pathologist that would make such a statement after testing only a few animals from one person's collection. Certain pathogens can reek havoc not only on the immune systems, but on the physiology of the animals. To make such a broad statement with very minimal research is irresponsible in my opinion.



    Is this based on what the pathologist said, what you have read, or from experience? I feel quite the opposite. I have never had a single issue in regards to health from any pied. I have a very nice group and have friends that would say the same about theirs.

    I didn't say that I agreed with what the pathologist said (sorry, I should have clarified that) ... Quite the opposite. I think he was making a wild leap based on a statistical fluke, and I don't personally think that being piebald had a damn thing to do with the snakes getting pneumonia. (IIRC, there were a whopping three pied females that died, and may even have been a few other snakes in the bunch.) However, it was a wild leap speculation made in public, in front of an entire conference of veterinary pathologists, and that caused a classmate of mine to state that she had heard that certain morphs of ball pythons have problems (referring to pieds). So, it is a rumor that is currently "out there" that reptile veterinarians may come across in their literary travels ... I'm just putting it out here so that if any of you hear it, you'll know where it came from (and take it with a large heaping portion of salt). (Incidentally, I don't think that the pathologist was trying to be hurtful to the ball python industry ... I think he just got over-excited with what he saw as a potential new discovery. I've been meaning to get in touch with him anyhow ...)

    Let me clarify what I meant when I said that I think that these rumors are based in truth ... I don't mean that I think that piebalds currently have any more problems than most morphs. My personal experience (based on an N = 2, my currently female pied and one that I sold) is that they eat and grow at least as well if not better than most ball morphs.

    What I do mean is that it's a VERY old rumor, and I DO believe that it is based in some fact from somewhere along the line. It may just be that, in 1993 or whenever the morph was first being established, the inbreeding was so tight that it concentrated some particularly negative genes that led to "failure to thrive" in a number of piebald lines. It may have had not one single thing to do with the piebald gene itself, but was an example of "founder effect" of sorts.

    I also think that it's quite possible that, as a result of deliberate outcrossing to the strongest, biggest and healthiest wild-type balls (probably as a direct result of the "rumor") piebalds are currently one of the stronger genes to work with -- as our collective experience with them all currently seems to suggest

    I do wonder if it may mean that perhaps they are a morph to use some caution with when contemplating the decision to inbreed.

    I apologize if I came off as slamming the morph -- believe me, that's not my intention. The biggest problem I have with piebalds is that there aren't enough of them in my snake room ....!

  11. The Following User Says Thank You to Serpent_Nirvana For This Useful Post:

    John1982 (07-06-2012)

  12. #17
    BPnet Senior Member Brandon Osborne's Avatar
    Join Date
    08-14-2008
    Location
    Indiana
    Posts
    1,225
    Thanks
    217
    Thanked 693 Times in 350 Posts
    Images: 5
    I didn't take it as a slam on pieds at all. I was just trying to understand where you were coming from on the idea. Just want to clarify though, pieds were not proven genetic until 1997.

    ....and to add, snakes are non-migratory, thus inbreeding is a very natural occurance. I've had people argue with me on this subject, but it's exactly how we get locale phenotypes. Ask any diehard grayband keeper. Btw, I did not include this part out of spite. Just wanted to also share my opinion on the negative notion of inbreeding being a problem....which I do not believe in.
    Last edited by Brandon Osborne; 07-06-2012 at 01:04 PM.
    Brandon Osborne

    Like Osborne Reptiles on Facebook!
    http://www.facebook.com/osbornereptiles
    Take a look at our website!
    www.osbornereptiles.com

  13. #18
    BPnet Veteran Serpent_Nirvana's Avatar
    Join Date
    06-15-2009
    Location
    New England
    Posts
    842
    Thanks
    357
    Thanked 303 Times in 216 Posts

    Re: Monster Pieds?

    Quote Originally Posted by Brandon Osborne View Post
    I didn't take it as a slam on pieds at all. I was just trying to understand where you were coming from on the idea. Just want to clarify though, pieds were not proven genetic until 1997.

    ....and to add, snakes are non-migratory, thus inbreeding is a very natural occurance. I've had people argue with me on this subject, but it's exactly how we get locale phenotypes. Ask any diehard grayband keeper. Btw, I did not include this part out of spite. Just wanted to also share my opinion on the negative notion of inbreeding being a problem....which I do not believe in.

    Thanks, I think I got 1993 because I believe that's the first year I ever saw an albino ball python ... For some reason it stuck in my head

    I don't have a problem with inbreeding, either, as long as it's done intelligently ... For example, if you were to inbreed your "powerhouse" line of piebalds to try and fix those good traits of good appetite and growth rate in your bloodline, I think that would make total sense!

    If, on the other hand, a breeder finds herself with a smallish, slow-growing, poor feeding but genetically valuable piebald (say, a super pastel super Enchi clown pied), I would recommend to her that she outcross it to a stronger bloodline rather than keeping back and using his het daughters (even if they are pastel Enchi double het pied clowns ... Which would make it mighty tempting!)

  14. #19
    Registered User
    Join Date
    06-27-2009
    Posts
    25
    Thanks
    0
    Thanked 51 Times in 12 Posts

    Re: Monster Pieds?

    I have a Pied female from 2008 and she is about 3000 gramm.
    The others from 2009 are between 1600 and 2100.

    One het Pied from 2011 is now on 1100.

  15. The Following User Says Thank You to Dragons-deluxe For This Useful Post:

    John1982 (07-10-2012)

  16. #20
    BPnet Veteran interloc's Avatar
    Join Date
    09-25-2011
    Location
    ontario canada
    Posts
    1,538
    Thanks
    331
    Thanked 627 Times in 410 Posts
    Images: 79
    I have a pair of het pieds and they are my worst eaters. Usually every other week is what they have both been averaging. Just for comparison I have 2 snakes that HAMMER food. One is my dinker female, one is my pastel het red het hypo. Both these snakes usually get the rats that the pieds dont eat lol.


    Sent from my poo fone using Tapatalk

  17. The Following User Says Thank You to interloc For This Useful Post:

    John1982 (07-10-2012)

Page 2 of 3 FirstFirst 123 LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v4.2.1