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

» Site Navigation

» Home
 > FAQ

» Online Users: 727

0 members and 727 guests
No Members online
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.

» Today's Birthdays

None

» Stats

Members: 75,905
Threads: 249,102
Posts: 2,572,091
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, Pattyhud
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 15
  1. #1
    BPnet Veteran VooDooDoc's Avatar
    Join Date
    11-13-2011
    Location
    North Carolina
    Posts
    231
    Thanks
    21
    Thanked 30 Times in 21 Posts

    Constantly roaming lately seems unhappy in his new tank

    My snake seemed fine in his new tank at first. He was at least hiding, but on a feeding strike. He finally ate for me 2 weeks ago, but since about 3 days after that he has just been roaming his tank. I've tried raising and lowering the temps a few degrees but makes no difference. I tried to feed him this week and he refused, ignored the rat like it wasn't there, even left it in the cage overnight (I feed F/T).

    He also has only pooped/peed once in the past few weeks and that was the day after he ate. I get why he isin't pooping alot, but no urates or wet bedding seems strange to me.

    Other than the roaming and not eating he seems fine. Looks normal, acts normal when I take him out. So nothing changed behavior wise out of the tank. It just seems like he doesn't like something about his tank and is doing his best to escape. And half the time when he's not roaming he hides behind the hide on the hot spot, not in the hide.

    His hides are new with the tank and they may be a bit on the big side, I've tried stuffing with news paper, makes no difference. They are about 8"x8". He's 38" or so and 1300 grams before his feeding strike.



    I've turned the hide on the hot spot (right in the picture) so the opening faces the back of the tank, that seemed to get him to go in a bit more, but eventually he stopped that as well.

    So anyway, there are 2 heat lamps to keep ambient temps up, they are on a thermostat (that thing hanging in the middle) and have dimmers. There is repti-heat cable under the right half of the tank with a thermostat set at 92 (probe is taped under the tank).

    I have two thermometer probes, one on each side, one side is 78-81, the other is more 80-83 ambient. The digital therm/hygrometer in the picture gets moved around the cage (usually by the snake), I use it to see how humidity changes throughout the day. Humidity is between 45-55%, I have a humidifier to add moisture when its really dry.

  2. #2
    BPnet Veteran satomi325's Avatar
    Join Date
    08-15-2011
    Location
    In a galaxy far,far away.
    Posts
    6,423
    Thanks
    2,429
    Thanked 3,969 Times in 2,446 Posts
    Images: 5
    Your temps are too low. Your hot side needs to be 88-92. The ambient is ok.

    How large is your snake? If he's really small, I would put more fake greenery or other decorations around to clutter up the space and make it more secure feeling. Maybe even swap out to smaller hides.
    Last edited by satomi325; 08-29-2012 at 07:27 PM.

  3. #3
    BPnet Royalty KMG's Avatar
    Join Date
    06-09-2012
    Location
    Tx
    Posts
    5,633
    Thanks
    1,032
    Thanked 2,944 Times in 1,958 Posts
    Images: 55
    If the tank is alot larger or more open than it's last you might try adding cover like driftwood and plants to offer a more secure feeling. I added mood to a hide that is to big. I put it just inside the door and it doubles as humid hide when I mist it during a shed.




    - - - Updated - - -

    Quote Originally Posted by satomi325 View Post
    Your temps are too low. Your hot side needs to be 88-92. The ambient is ok.

    How large is your snake? If he's really small, I would put more fake greenery or other decorations around to clutter up the space and make it more secure feeling. Maybe even swap out to smaller hides.
    Reread it. They said the snake size and only listed ambient temps. They said the heat cord is set to 92 which with that thin layer of substrate should be good.
    Last edited by KMG; 08-29-2012 at 07:32 PM.
    KMG
    0.1 BP 1.1 Blood Python 1.0 Brazilian Rainbow Boa 1.0 Aru Green Tree Python
    0.1 Emerald Tree Boa 0.1 Dumeril Boa 0.1 Carpet Python 0.1 Central American Boa
    0.1 Brooks Kingsnake 0.1 Speckled Kingsnake 1.0 Western Hognose
    0.1 Blonde Madagascar Hognose 1.0 Columbian Boa

    1.1 Olde English Bulldogge 1.0 Pit Bull

  4. #4
    BPnet Veteran VooDooDoc's Avatar
    Join Date
    11-13-2011
    Location
    North Carolina
    Posts
    231
    Thanks
    21
    Thanked 30 Times in 21 Posts
    Yeah, I'll try adding more plants and stuff. It is definitely more open because its bigger. He was in a 20gal long. This is more closer in size to a 40gal I would think, its 36"x18"x18"

  5. #5
    Registered User
    Join Date
    06-25-2012
    Posts
    103
    Thanks
    11
    Thanked 32 Times in 19 Posts
    Images: 3
    Are BP's sensitive to ventilation? As in can be too much/too little? Those particular cages have a good bit of airflow, more than an aquarium or tub would.

    I don't get these guys when you upgrade them to new tanks. I've seen a complete change in behavior since I went from a 10gal to a 40gal breeder, with enough foliage and driftwood/humid-hides/etc. to be a virtual jungle. For the first couple of weeks he seemed normal as usual....then things changed. He used to always stay in his hot side during the day, and come out at night and bask or lounge around. Now he only stays in his middle hide (it's only around 83-84'F there, MOVE guy!) even though they're identical, rarely comes out at night, and has gotten extremely food aggressive. His temps and humidity are fine, but he's acting like he's starving. Three days ago I put a rat on top of his cage while I took the clips off, and he was rising up and striking at the lid to get to the rat! It was a fairly large rat too, but ever since then if I pass the cage or go to check on his temps he comes right out like he's waiting for food, and I have to be really careful sticking my hand in there. He hasn't tagged me yet, but I'm wondering if I should just feed him more often and ride out his sudden hunger-craving?

  6. #6
    BPnet Royalty KMG's Avatar
    Join Date
    06-09-2012
    Location
    Tx
    Posts
    5,633
    Thanks
    1,032
    Thanked 2,944 Times in 1,958 Posts
    Images: 55
    To much airflow would lead to lowed humidity.

    As long as your feeding within the suggested weight for the weight of your snake I would stick with your schedule. Never complain about a snake that eats to well, that's not a problem. Be thankful.
    KMG
    0.1 BP 1.1 Blood Python 1.0 Brazilian Rainbow Boa 1.0 Aru Green Tree Python
    0.1 Emerald Tree Boa 0.1 Dumeril Boa 0.1 Carpet Python 0.1 Central American Boa
    0.1 Brooks Kingsnake 0.1 Speckled Kingsnake 1.0 Western Hognose
    0.1 Blonde Madagascar Hognose 1.0 Columbian Boa

    1.1 Olde English Bulldogge 1.0 Pit Bull

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

    ballpythonluvr (08-30-2012)

  8. #7
    BPnet Veteran The Serpent Merchant's Avatar
    Join Date
    10-15-2011
    Location
    Orlando, Florida
    Posts
    8,193
    Thanks
    1,504
    Thanked 3,300 Times in 2,344 Posts

    Re: Constantly roaming lately seems unhappy in his new tank

    Quote Originally Posted by OmNomNom View Post
    Are BP's sensitive to ventilation? As in can be too much/too little? Those particular cages have a good bit of airflow, more than an aquarium or tub would.

    I don't get these guys when you upgrade them to new tanks. I've seen a complete change in behavior since I went from a 10gal to a 40gal breeder, with enough foliage and driftwood/humid-hides/etc. to be a virtual jungle. For the first couple of weeks he seemed normal as usual....then things changed. He used to always stay in his hot side during the day, and come out at night and bask or lounge around. Now he only stays in his middle hide (it's only around 83-84'F there, MOVE guy!) even though they're identical, rarely comes out at night, and has gotten extremely food aggressive. His temps and humidity are fine, but he's acting like he's starving. Three days ago I put a rat on top of his cage while I took the clips off, and he was rising up and striking at the lid to get to the rat! It was a fairly large rat too, but ever since then if I pass the cage or go to check on his temps he comes right out like he's waiting for food, and I have to be really careful sticking my hand in there. He hasn't tagged me yet, but I'm wondering if I should just feed him more often and ride out his sudden hunger-craving?
    Well going directly from a 10 gallon to a 40 gallon is a huge leap, even with cover it might have been too much for him. some BP's do fine in larger cages others do not.

    Ventilation is important. too much and the cage will be too dry, but too little airflow is equally as bad. stagnant air can cause many things in a BP cage.

    e also has only pooped/peed once in the past few weeks and that was the day after he ate. I get why he isin't pooping alot, but no urates or wet bedding seems strange to me.
    Snakes get most of their water from the rodents they eat (66% of a rats body weight is water)
    Last edited by The Serpent Merchant; 08-30-2012 at 05:29 PM.
    ~Aaron

    0.1 Pastel 100% Het Clown Ball Python (Hestia)
    1.0 Coastal/Jungle Carpet Python (Shagrath)
    0.1 Dumeril's Boa (Nergal)

    0.1 Bearded Dragon (Gaius)

    1.0 Siberian Husky (Picard)
    0.1 German Shepherd/Lab Mix (Jadzia)

  9. #8
    BPnet Lifer MrLang's Avatar
    Join Date
    12-13-2011
    Location
    Massachusetts
    Posts
    2,530
    Thanks
    726
    Thanked 1,456 Times in 831 Posts
    Images: 8

    Re: Constantly roaming lately seems unhappy in his new tank

    Quote Originally Posted by VooDooDoc View Post
    tank
    One problem
    Quote Originally Posted by VooDooDoc View Post
    2 heat lamps
    Another problem
    Quote Originally Posted by VooDooDoc View Post
    one side is 78-81, the other is more 80-83 ambient
    2 heat lamps and your ambient temps aren't higher than 80 degrees? Do you live in the arctic?


    Ditch the fancy terrarium[EDIT: or get a bearded dragon for that thing!]... your BP doesn't like it and you'll never see him [EDIT: but you'd see a bearded dragon!] once he's happy anyway. You're just taking up space in your house with that thing.
    Last edited by MrLang; 08-30-2012 at 06:02 PM.
    Dreamtime Exotics -- Check it out!
    Ball Pythons, Monitors, Saltwater Reef, Fancy Rats, Ferrets

  10. #9
    BPnet Veteran VooDooDoc's Avatar
    Join Date
    11-13-2011
    Location
    North Carolina
    Posts
    231
    Thanks
    21
    Thanked 30 Times in 21 Posts
    MrLang your response was totally unhelpful and borderline rude. Many folks, even on these forums keep them in tanks and they are happy. Mine was completely fine for his entire life until now. If I wanted to, or could use a tub I would. I don't, and I can't. Simple. So hopefully we can skip the whole tank vs tub debate in this thread as its not really going to be productive.

    The heat lamps are also not a problem. If you actually read the post you'll see they are on a thermostat to keep the ambient at 80. So explain what's wrong with them? They keep the air the right temp, the humidity is fine, maybe I'm missing something.

    As to the issue about ventilation, the top is screen, but I cut plexiglass to cover most of it. I left a small patch under the lamps. The front is ventilated. My humidity stays fine on most days and when its really dry I can remedy that easily enough. The tank doesn't smell musty or anything so I think I'm OK in that department. If left open all the heat and humidity would definitely leave the tank though.

    Given the fact that temps are fine, humidity is fine, I don't know how this could be considered any less effective of an enclosure as one of them expensive PVC setups. Maybe a bit more complicated, but it is fraction of the cost since I had all this stuff laying around.

  11. #10
    Registered User huskie bear's Avatar
    Join Date
    10-15-2011
    Location
    very western massachusetts
    Posts
    37
    Thanks
    17
    Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
    Images: 1
    Well VooDooDoc, I don't know if I saw you mention anything about lighting, but, one contributing factor maybe a lighting schedule? Originally My temps were so low I had to turn my light on and off constantly, which definitely stressed my snakes out. They wouldn't eat, and they also constantly roamed. Eventually
    I figured it out and got them on a day/night cycle. AND IT SORTED ITSELF OUT RIGHT AWAY! I was ecstatic! So I'm not sure if this is going to help, but good luck!
    ~I play more Xbox than anyone around, caring for my snakes, and loving my wife, All this guy needs~




    1.0 wife (Danielle)
    1.0 Normal ball python (rick)
    0.1 Western hognose (Phyllis)

Page 1 of 2 12 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