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Thread: Frozen thawed/

  1. #11
    BPnet Senior Member Marissa@MKmorphs's Avatar
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    Re: Frozen thawed/

    Quote Originally Posted by Deborah View Post
    improperly thawed prey can lead to regurgitation or worse death, so make sure anything you feed is properly thawed.

    For that the best way is to thaw the prey item slowly at room temps and re-heat with a hair dryer.

    Thawing in hot water can lead to a prey thawed on the outside while still frozen in the inside.

    Again the key is SLOW thawing.
    X2

    I thaw my rodents room temp for about half a day, and when I am certain they are all fully thawed and room temp I take a low wattage heat mat made by Ultra therm (can order from reptile basics), lay a piece of foil down and let my rodents warm up on that slightly warm mat until they are slightly warmer than room temp. I have about 80 snakes to feed, so with this large heat mat I'm able to warm up, and keep warm many rodents (about 2 dozen small rats) at a time, so my feeding is as efficient as possible.
    ~Marissa~


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  3. #12
    BPnet Senior Member JoshSloane's Avatar
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    Im not lazy, and usually they are 100% thawed. Sometimes if in a rush they might have a tiny bit of a cold center.

    This is exactly what ive been talking about with this forum. People dogmatically follow "the rules" without even beginning to understand it.

    Obviously I would never feed a completely frozen rodent to a snake. Im referring to a MINOR interior portion being maybe SLIGHTLY FROZEN. You are right that as ectotherms they do not intrinsically regulate body temperature. But a mouse with a bit of a frozen center isn't going to completely change their internal temps. In 10 years of snake keeping ive never had one regurg.

    I would caution anyone on this forum to immediately claim that 90% thawed rodent "IS GOING TO KILL YOUR SNAKE!!!"

    Relax

  4. #13
    BPnet Veteran h20hunter's Avatar
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    Re: Frozen thawed/

    Fine, continue on. However, I still think providing the advice to others to do so is wrong. I'm out on this one.

  5. #14
    BPnet Senior Member JoshSloane's Avatar
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    Im just providing a counterpoint from my own experiences and those of people I know. Seeing as no one has provided any actual medical information here its all just conjecture and anecdotal. To each their own.

  6. #15
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    Re: Frozen thawed/

    Quote Originally Posted by JoshSloane View Post
    I would caution anyone on this forum to immediately claim that 90% thawed rodent "IS GOING TO KILL YOUR SNAKE!!!"

    Relax
    I would caution anyone on this forum against feeding a snake a rodent that is only 90% thawed.

    It takes no effort to thaw something. Put it on the counter and walk away for four or five hours. If you don't have time to properly defrost your food, just let your snake sit until tomorrow. It can handle a day without food much better than it can handle something <32F in it's system which is not in any way designed to handle cold food.
    It is okay to use pine bedding for snakes.
    It is okay to feed live food to snakes.

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  8. #16
    BPnet Senior Member JoshSloane's Avatar
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    Im still waiting for someone to even venture a reasonable medical answer as to why a tiny amount of frozen center would harm a snake.

    Here's a thought...Even if the rat is 90% thawed, the cold is in the center, and the outside is nice and warm. Now what part of the rat does the snakes internal organs interact with? Obviously the outside. The snakes digestive tract isn't even coming into contact with the cool part of the rat, which will simply thaw internally.

  9. #17
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    Re: Frozen thawed/

    Quote Originally Posted by JoshSloane View Post
    Im still waiting for someone to even venture a reasonable medical answer as to why a tiny amount of frozen center would harm a snake.

    Here's a thought...Even if the rat is 90% thawed, the cold is in the center, and the outside is nice and warm. Now what part of the rat does the snakes internal organs interact with? Obviously the outside. The snakes digestive tract isn't even coming into contact with the cool part of the rat, which will simply thaw internally.
    Until they squeeze it, or take a deep bite. Then the snake comes into contact with the frozen center.


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    Registered User M.P.C's Avatar
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    you may not have ever had an issue with feeding partly frozen but that does not mean the dangers dont exist... frost bite is the biggest danger to the snakes internals and suggesting that its ok because you havent had a personal issue yet is a very bad practice, thats like a heroin addict telling someone they cant o/d on it because they have never had that problem.... you dont half ass cooking your own food why would you not take the extra time to remove one of the only dangers to feeding f/t prey

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  12. #19
    BPnet Veteran DVirginiana's Avatar
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    No, a 90% thawed rodent probably won't kill your snake. However, you KNOW snakes are not meant to digest frozen food. Why give them something they are not meant to digest when you could just as easily give them something you know for certain is safe?
    This isn't an example of people "Blindly following the rules" it's an example of people using common sense and properly thawing their snakes' prey.
    3.0 Thamnophis sirtalis,
    1.1 Thamnophis cyrtopsis ocellatus
    0.1 Python regius
    1.0 Litorea caerulea
    0.1 Ceratophrys cranwelli
    0.1 Terrapene carolina
    0.1 Grammostola rosea
    0.1 Hogna carolinensis
    0.0.1 Brachypelma smithi

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  14. #20
    BPnet Royalty Albert Clark's Avatar
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    Re: Frozen thawed/

    Quote Originally Posted by JoshSloane View Post
    Im still waiting for someone to even venture a reasonable medical answer as to why a tiny amount of frozen center would harm a snake.

    Here's a thought...Even if the rat is 90% thawed, the cold is in the center, and the outside is nice and warm. Now what part of the rat does the snakes internal organs interact with? Obviously the outside. The snakes digestive tract isn't even coming into contact with the cool part of the rat, which will simply thaw internally.
    The reasonable medical answer is snakes don't eat cold or partially frozen or frozen food ever. They eat and are supposed to eat normothermic foodstuffs. If they are given cold or partially frozen food by accident or negligence it can cause a mild hypothermic condition that may or may not lead to shunting of blood away from endothelial tissue in the digestive tract or worse any of the digestive organs. Why even go there when our animals are depending on us to do the right thing for them and be an advocate for their well- being!

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