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Thread: What is this?

  1. #1
    BPnet Veteran Sandy_01's Avatar
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    What is this?

    Yes, I know it’s a Carpet python. Can anyone educate me on locality (what kind)?

    Also, what temps and humidity do yall keep yours?


  2. #2
    BPnet Veteran Sandy_01's Avatar
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    I am not sure because I didn’t purchase them, so I don’t know who the breeder is. After looking at about 2 million pics on the web, I think they are normal Coastals. I don’t know how much variety there is in the pattern of Coastals. The pattern seems a little different than what I see on the web. I really don’t know anything about Carpet Pythons.

    I am being told that they are two females. I haven’t yet tried to verify this because they are much smaller than the pythons that I am accustom to handling. So if everything works out with these two, I may be in the market for a really hot looking male in the future. I looked at some pics of Tiger-Jags that seemed pretty awesome.

    They are at a weird stage in growth, they are being fed 2 mouse pinks a week because rat pinks seem to be too large a meal for them.

    They are set up in tubs that are about 10x12 inches. They each have 2 hide and a water bowl. For these I added a perch in the back end of the tub. The ambient temp at the front end of the tub is about 78 degrees and the hot spot (belly heat) is about 90 degrees. For the hot spot I am using 3 inch flexwatt on a herpstat at the back end of the belly of the tub.

  3. #3
    BPnet Lifer reptileexperts's Avatar
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    For Carpets I keep them in arborial caging with still a good size of terrestrial space available. My temperature on the hottest point in the cage can have a ground temp of up to 95, but averages around 92, the perch bellow and off center is usually around 88 and the other perch stays around 82. Ambient rarely fall bellows 80-81, and I keep my cages at 50% humidity until a shed comes which then gets increased to 100% humidity for a few hours, and then drops to a constant 75% humidity for the duration of the shed.

    You can keep carpets in tubs as juvenile / hatchlings and grow them out this way. Just make sure you do offer them space up high, some will seriously go bonkers if you do not give them this option. Also, you may want to get creative and mount an RBI hide on the side of the tub near the top for it to use as an arboreal hide. I have a Granite IJ that refuses to use any hides on the ground, and was constantly breaking his flourscent light to use it as a hide way up in the cage (we're talking about a granite that is currently 16" long). So I mounted an RBI hide upside down on the top of the tank, and he goes and sits up in it :-) not too hard to do just takes some creativity.

    I can't see the image (at work) so I can't attest to the locality (or more properly defined sub-species). Where did you get it from? There are not many people that can guarentee a pedigree. All my snakes have pedigrees with them from the breeders (Nick Mutton is the breeder of the majority of mine, ACR is the breeder of the rest). So I work with very traceable lines of snakes to keep them pure and good looking :-).
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    Sandy_01 (11-16-2012)

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    BPnet Veteran Sandy_01's Avatar
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    My young partner bought them while I was on deployment. I will try to find the breeder for more info on them after the holiday. I didn't realize it went so in-depth (lack of a better word) with Carpets. Thank you for your help, I will have to make some corrections.

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    Sandy_01 (11-16-2012)

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