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Re: Cloud, Colombian BCI
 Originally Posted by Gio
Boas grow their entire lives. Your boa is quite large for its age, and seems a little heavy in the lower half, maybe he recently ate or its just the picture. It's a nice looking boa none the less. This time of year you should lower the temps in the cage if ambient temps don't lower enough in your house to change/drop cage temps for a seasonal adjustment. Boas should be taking in less food during this part of the season. Some very experienced boa keepers will skip a month or two or more of feeding.
If your boa is already close to 6 feet, that is the normal range for a male BCI. 7 feet is considered quite large. Boas that are fed a lot and brought up too fast die much earlier than boas that are conservatively fed.
Gus Renfro, who is considered THE authority on boas stated "the biggest boas are the oldest boas". What he meant by that, is that boas that are brought up properly will live much longer lives and grow to their full potential.
There are some factors, outside of the obvious ones that will influence a male boa's growth. If you have no female boas in your home, and you never plan on breeding your male, it will likely become larger than a male boa that detects the scents of a female during breeding season or is actually used to breed. That process takes up an incredible amount of energy and male boas will often refuse food during breeding season.
You can also read where Vin Russo mentions in his book, THE COMPLETE BOA CONSTRICTOR, that he feels boas grow more when they are not in a constant state of feeding and digesting. Russo, who is a friend of Gus Rentfro's is also an authority on BC's.
Too many people feel these snakes require a constant supply of food, and it's just NOT true. Boa Constrictors are designed to be able to go long stretches without food. It's a hard fact to slam home, but if you want to have a long lived, healthy animal, drop the temps and let the snake take a break from the cycle of feeding and digesting and feeding again.
A snake that is pure muscle and lean is the ideal snake. There are no fat boas in the wild!
Yes, sorry, that is because he recently ate. Those photos were only 2-3 days after he ate, so he's going to look a bit bigger than normal. Here are some of him empty from a few days ago, he thins out a lot after he poos. I have begun a biweekly feeding schedule over the last several feedings, and I may lengthen it out to 3 or 4 weeks for his rabbits, because he put on a lot more weight than I had ever thought he would have just from one rabbit and I was not expecting it to be so extreme. He was 7lb 11.6oz empty 2 weeks ago before I fed him his first rabbit, and he was 8lb 13oz (3,666 grams to be specific) empty after he voided all his rabbit. So, he gained an entire pound just from one rabbit! I will most likely be waiting a 3rd week, if not a 4th, before I offer him his 3rd rabbit, as I try to keep him on the leaner more muscular side.



8.3 Boa imperator ('15 sunglow "Nymeria," '11 normal "Cloud," '16 anery motley "Crona," '10 ghost "Howl," '08 jungle "Dominika," '22 RC pastel hypo jungle "Aleister," '22 pastel normal "Gengar," '22 orangasm hypo "Daemon," '22 poss jungle "Jinzo," '22 poss jungle "Calcifer," '22 motley "Guin")
1.4 Boa imperator; unnamed '22 hbs
3.3 Plains garter snakes
1.2 checkered garter snakes (unnamed)
~RIP~
2.2 Brazilian rainbow boa ('15 Picasso stripe BRBs "Guin" and "Morzan, and '15 hypo "Homura", '14 normal "Sanji")
1.0 garter snake ('13 albino checkered "Draco")
1.0 eastern garter ('13 "Demigod)
0.0.1 ball python ('06 "Bud")
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