» Site Navigation
0 members and 679 guests
No Members online
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.
» Today's Birthdays
» Stats
Members: 75,910
Threads: 249,115
Posts: 2,572,187
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, coda
|
-
Registered User
Healthy weight
Dear everyone,
I bought my ball python about a month ago. When I got her, she was 111grams. I measured her today, she came up to 173grams. The breeder told me that she was born in October, 2012, so she is about 6-7 months old. Is that underweight for her age? I am not planning to breed her or anything, she is a pet, but I'd like her to grow nicely and be healthy. She was eating fuzzies when I got her, but that was too small so I got her 20-30gr full-grown mice.
Totally different question: the breeder also said, that she was born from a clutch of a wildcolor x morph ( which he couldn't tell...). Is there any way to find that out? I was thinking and I think the best way is to get her a 100% wildcolor male, and then see what's in the clutch, right? I know it is silly, I am just interested, because she is het for something.
Thank you all in advance,
M.
-
-
Re: Healthy weight
It sounds like she might be a little underweight. Can you show us a picture? That will help. I'm glad you switched her to full size mice because fuzzy mice are WAY too small.
As for her morph, a picture would be best to determine what she is. By wildcolor do you mean wildcaught? Normal? And if the breeder doesn't know what morph was the father, I'm going to say she's probably just a normal with no hets. Again, a picture would be helpful.
-
-
Id be willing to say she is fine and healthy. Most of us feed way more than what is necessary. A picture though would be able to get a better response.
-
-
Registered User
Hey everyone,
thank you for the answers! I uploaded two pictures in my gallery, not the best ones, but you get the idea.
http://ball-pythons.net/gallery/show...mageuser=33729
http://ball-pythons.net/gallery/show...mageuser=33729
She is eating well, even though she is a bit picky at the beginning. She sniffs all around a lot before she gets the prey, and she almost never strikes, just eats it like a princess. I feed her frozen-thawed, but it's working so I am happy.
-
-
Registered User
Oh, and about the morph:
By wildcolor I mean captive bread animal with normal color. So yeah, normal.
But the breeder said, she comes from a clutch where the mother was also a normal, and the father was a morph. He couldn't tell which morph, which is weird, but it seemed that he didn't really value the non-morph snakes, which was said. So I guess I can only find that out If I breed her to a 100% normal male.
-
-
Re: Healthy weight
about the morph:
if its a dominant or codominant morph, you should be able to identify it by just inspecting the snake you have. And i dont see a morph here.
if the snake is heterozygous for some recessive morph, if you breed it to a normal you will only get normals and dont learn anything. You would need to know what specific morph it is het for and then breed it to the specific morph. or you would need to try each one individually, like: breed to albino to see if its maybe het albino, breed to ghost to see if its maybe het ghost, and so on with clown, axanthic, G-stripe, pied, caramel, ... .. .
you could try to get pictures of the parent snakes, especially the father. that will help more than actually breeding it. it looks quite normal to me, so if you breed it to a normal chances are you will just get 100% normals. i would just consider your female a normal, and then just breed multi-gene males to it. proving it out with a normal to most likely get a clutch of normals just doesnt seem to be worth it.
most likely scenario: the guy bred some codominant morph or combo to the female, like pewter male or yellowbelly male or whatever, and depending on the pairing and your luck you get something like 50% morph 50% normal. Or 25% normals and 75% with one or two genes. And yes, breeders just sort these out and sell them as normals and dont pay too much attention.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Pythonfriend For This Useful Post:
-
Registered User
Re: Healthy weight
Thank you for the detailed answer! I know she is normal!
But I am just so disappointed that the guy just simply couldn't tell anything about the father. I asked the breeder already, he didn't remember. Which is weird, but okay.
I know a bit about genetics, I had it in school, but I don't know too much about the morphs themselves. But learning never hurt anyone, right?: )
Thank you again!
-
-
Re: Healthy weight
 Originally Posted by maegalcarwen
But I am just so disappointed that the guy just simply couldn't tell anything about the father. I asked the breeder already, he didn't remember. Which is weird, but okay.
He probably couldn't tell you because he paired more than one male with the mother. So, in the pewter vs. yellowbelly scenario, your baby didn't get a copy of the pastel, cinnamon, or yb gene. Therefore, he'd actually be lying to tell you it was the pewter when in all likelihood it could have been the yellowbelly and vice versa - no way to tell since the baby is a normal.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

-
-
Registered User
Re: Healthy weight
So now this has me concerned... I've had Pandora for 2 weeks now- she's eaten twice and shed once since I got her. The people I got her from said she was 10 months old and they were feeding her a hopper every 2 weeks. As of Thursday, she is 153 grams and approximately 20 inches long. I'm feeding her weekly, but I'm afraid to give her anything bigger than a hopper because she tends to catch them by the back end and isn't big enough to kill them fast. I'm afraid anything bigger will be able to bite her while being constricted. I really can't handle the idea of f/t or pre killed. So- is she too small for her age? And should I go to bigger mice and not worry so much about her getting bit?
-
-
Registered User
Well, if they told me that Cleopatra was underweight, and she is 3-4 months younger than your Pandora, then yeah I guess she is underweight. What's wrong with feeding f/t? She should eat adult mice already, or maybe middle rats.
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|