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  1. #11
    Registered User southbay54's Avatar
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    haha come on you know you want to be tag
    1.0 Orange Ghost Ball Python
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  2. #12
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    Re: Perfect Example Of Cage Aggression And Feeding In The Enclosure.

    Quote Originally Posted by patientz3ro View Post
    Not yet. When I go through the current batch of micicles I'm going to try my mouse brain on the head trick. Live rat is a last resort. I know there are thousands of pythons eating live rats without issues, but the fact that she doesn't strike or constrict prey makes me a tiny bit nervous. I had a rat in high school that was given to me by a pet shop employee who bought him as a feeder for her BP. That ended badly for the snake.
    You really think you have a ball python that doesn't know how to kill small rodents?

  3. #13
    BPnet Veteran patientz3ro's Avatar
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    Re: Perfect Example Of Cage Aggression And Feeding In The Enclosure.

    Quote Originally Posted by southbay54 View Post
    haha come on you know you want to be tag
    Well, she HAS tagged one person, so I've seen how little damage she can do. I was sitting on the couch with her wrapped around my neck and a friend of mine came in. I told her Ajja was asleep and not to go sticking her finger in her face. Well, someone didn't believe me, and Ajja gave a textbook demonstration of an opportunistic predator on a hair trigger. Apparently, she didn't know snakes have no eyelids and sleep with their eyes open.

    Pretty impressive bite. I think it bled almost as much as my last flu shot.

    Ajja laid right back down and went back to sleep while I tried to stop laughing.

    Sent from my HTCEVOV4G using Tapatalk

  4. #14
    Registered User southbay54's Avatar
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    interesting lol
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  5. #15
    BPnet Veteran patientz3ro's Avatar
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    Re: Perfect Example Of Cage Aggression And Feeding In The Enclosure.

    Quote Originally Posted by southbay54 View Post
    interesting lol
    That's an understatement! I realize that every animal has its own unique personality, so Ajja's abnormal temperament and personality could quite possibly be a complete coincidence. On the other hand, the atypical things that I've done in terms of feeding, housing, and "socialization," have all produced almost exactly the results I anticipated. Granted, it hasn't been a strictly "scientific" process, and I haven't attempted to reproduce the same results in another animal but I feel like the majority of my theories are actually playing out. Like I said, though, it could be a total fluke. If that's the case, I'm EXTREMELY fortunate to have gotten a snake that defies conventional behaviors. Either way, I'm really proud of her.

    Sent from my HTCEVOV4G using Tapatalk

  6. #16
    Super Moderator bcr229's Avatar
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    Re: Perfect Example Of Cage Aggression And Feeding In The Enclosure.

    She might very well react differently to a live feeder. My normal female acts very like the OP's when eating - zombie dancing a f/t feeder is just a waste of time. Normally I just lay the feeder down in her tub, and she eats it rather lazily and doesn't often bother to constrict it. I think she'd pick it daintily from my hand if I let her.

    Last weekend one of the males that eats live only was not interested in eating, so I flipped his small rat into her tub. In a split second she became a wholly different animal - rather than lying in wait as an ambush predator, she tore after it, chased it to the other side of the tub, and hit it like a freight train. She knew the difference all right.
    Last edited by bcr229; 12-23-2013 at 10:49 PM.

  7. The Following User Says Thank You to bcr229 For This Useful Post:

    patientz3ro (12-23-2013)

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