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i think the results will be quite nasty. much of the stuff inside is held together by the skin around it, cut it and different internal organs go everywhere.
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Registered User
Re: Cutting Frozen Rats?
 Originally Posted by Pythonfriend
i think the results will be quite nasty. much of the stuff inside is held together by the skin around it, cut it and different internal organs go everywhere.
I thought there would be some invisible force holding everything inside lol
To the OP if you did this please post pics!!
0.1 Blood Python, 0.1 Pastel Ball Python, 1.0 Yellow Belly Ball Python, 0.1 Western Hognose, 0.1 Kenyan Sand Boa, 0.1 Lavender Reticulated Python
0.0.1 P. platyomma, 0.0.1 B. albopilosum, 0.0.1 B. smithi, 0.0.1 B. vagans, 0.0.1 G. pulchra, 0.1 A. versicolor, 0.1 N. chromatus, 0.1 G. pulchripes
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Registered User
There's really no reason to be rude.
1 Husband, 1 Western Hognose Snake (male), 2 ferrets (2 females), 1 male jungle leopard gecko, 4 gerbils (2 females & 2 males), 1 male dwarf rabbit, 3 guinea pigs (1 male, 1 female and 1 female skinny pig), 2 American parakeets, 2 cats (male bobcat hybrid and a male Egyptian Mau mix), and 2 dogs (female Mini Dachshund and a female Alaskan Malamute).
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Registered User
Re: Cutting Frozen Rats?
 Originally Posted by Awaiting Abyss
There's really no reason to be rude.
I hope you were not referring to me. I was only joking...
0.1 Blood Python, 0.1 Pastel Ball Python, 1.0 Yellow Belly Ball Python, 0.1 Western Hognose, 0.1 Kenyan Sand Boa, 0.1 Lavender Reticulated Python
0.0.1 P. platyomma, 0.0.1 B. albopilosum, 0.0.1 B. smithi, 0.0.1 B. vagans, 0.0.1 G. pulchra, 0.1 A. versicolor, 0.1 N. chromatus, 0.1 G. pulchripes
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Registered User
I'm confused. I don't see anyone even close to being rude in this thread.
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Re: Cutting Frozen Rats?
You can cut FT prey.
Some people do so for their animals with no issue. I know people who feed FT avian and rodent prey to certain species in parts.
And some snakes do continue to eat FT prey that has exploded in half after a constriction.
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Last edited by satomi325; 01-13-2014 at 12:08 PM.
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Re: Cutting Frozen Rats?
 Originally Posted by Awaiting Abyss
I was referring to cutting open the rat.
As opposed to...?
Surely no one thought you were referring to the cat!
I'm sure you could cut a rat in half and feed it to a blood, but there's got to be a better way. Plus, what are you going to do with the tail end?
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Corn snake people feed partial pinkies to hatchling corns that are too small to eat a whole pink all the time. There is also a theory that just making a few holes in the skin allows the snake's digestive juices to penetrate faster thus making it a little safer to feed a prey item that is borderline too big. I've heard that one of the dangers of feeding too big of a meal is that it does not get digested fast enough and the snake will regurge whatever remains when it begins to spoil in the stomach, but I'm not sure this is 100% true.
There will be no harm in cutting they prey item in half. It might get messy, but I think as long as the snake eats f/t in general, it will end up eating at least part of the meal even if some guts get squished out. There is virtually no mess if you just cut the head off, although this is obviously not an even division and since snakes go for the head it might not take the body part.
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Re: Cutting Frozen Rats?
 Originally Posted by kc261
...since snakes go for the head it might not take the body part.

I think we were absent when they taught that one...
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to patientz3ro For This Useful Post:
EntertheWutang (01-17-2014),ViperSRT3g (01-13-2014)
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Registered User
Re: Cutting Frozen Rats?
 Originally Posted by patientz3ro
As opposed to...?
Surely no one thought you were referring to the cat!
I'm sure you could cut a rat in half and feed it to a blood, but there's got to be a better way. Plus, what are you going to do with the tail end?
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I was saying the inards don't go everywhere when cutting the rat. Someone else said that cats don't constrict so I said I was referring to cutting up the rat.
I would assume the other end would be frozen again and used at the next feeding.
1 Husband, 1 Western Hognose Snake (male), 2 ferrets (2 females), 1 male jungle leopard gecko, 4 gerbils (2 females & 2 males), 1 male dwarf rabbit, 3 guinea pigs (1 male, 1 female and 1 female skinny pig), 2 American parakeets, 2 cats (male bobcat hybrid and a male Egyptian Mau mix), and 2 dogs (female Mini Dachshund and a female Alaskan Malamute).
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