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  1. #11
    Registered User Slytherin_python's Avatar
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    Re: BP is trying to escape at night and won't eat?

    For heat I'm using an under-tank heater and a lamp on the top. I accidentally hit reply when I was finished lol. Anyways, I'm not sure what the temperature is under the substrate, but the temp on the hot side is regulated by a heating device/monitor thing. I don't know what it's called.
    Last edited by Slytherin_python; 05-11-2016 at 08:37 AM.

  2. #12
    Registered User Andylee11's Avatar
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    Granted it could be be husbandry related . I know if I was out checking out my new house and huge multi limbed monster was eye ballin me I would Probably run for my life .Until i understood it was no threat . Has he ate for you before ?
    Last edited by Andylee11; 05-11-2016 at 01:37 PM.

  3. #13
    BPnet Senior Member JodanOrNoDan's Avatar
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    I have found, if the snake does not want to eat and there is a rodent in the cage, live or dead, the snake will try to "escape" from the rodent.

  4. #14
    BPnet Lifer redshepherd's Avatar
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    Assuming your warm and cool side temps are on point, cluttering the enclosure with hides and stuff definitely helps a ball python feel secure and eat... The more enclosed and hidden they feel, the better and more consistent their feeding response, I have found.




  5. #15
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    Re: BP is trying to escape at night and won't eat?

    I was recently a fairly new owner and was having issues of an active snake. It is very important to know EXACTLY what is happening with the husbandry of your snake. I have a 20 gallon tank that has a UTH controlled by a thermostat and I have a thermometer sitting inside the tank over top of the UTH to monitor what the substrate temp is. I keep mine sitting at 90 on the hot side. We also have another thermometer in the middle of the tank to see what the ambient temp is which I try to keep at 80. Having a temperature gun has been very helpful as well to measure the cool side of the tank and for spot checks.

    As for feeding...do you have a schedule of it's previous eating habits? This is important. We feed every Sunday as were the instructions from the pet store. She knows when it's feeding day and she is always hungry and aware that day. I swear she knows Sunday = feed day.

    If I were you I would read the stuck post re how to set up a tank and follow those instructions to a T. Good luck. Once you have your tank 100% and your feeding schedule in place your snake will be happy and it will make your life easier as an owner.
    Valentine's Keeper

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    Slytherin_python (05-11-2016)

  7. #16
    Registered User Slytherin_python's Avatar
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    Re: BP is trying to escape at night and won't eat?

    Haha, I'm guessing I'd run for my life too. And no, I just got him last week. He's from the pet store. They told me to feed him on Tuesday which was yesterday.

    His temperatures and humidity is pretty much on the dot, going by everything that people have told me. His tank does seem to me like it's pretty barren with just water bowl, hide, and log tunnel. I'm definitely going to get two more hides this weekend and some fake plants. Maybe some extra little things as well.

    Right now he's hiding under his log tunnel and I just removed the mouse which has been untouched and despised of it. I was guessing to maybe wait until next Tuesday to feed him, because I'm going to be adding new things to his tank on Saturday or Sunday and I've heard that if you add new things you should wait a few days before feeding.

  8. #17
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    In the meantime, you can put other stuff in there for him to hide in. Cardboard boxes, tubes, upside down plastic container with an entrance cut in it, etc. He doesn't care if it wasn't sold as an official reptile product. But what makes a little critter more scared than anything is being out in the open with no cover - anything bigger and faster could just swoop in and snap him up, and there are lots of hungry mouths in the world that would happily slurp up a defenseless little snake.

    I know it's hard, but be patient. Let him settle in, figure out that no one is going to eat him, find a routine. He won't starve in a week or three; if he's left alone with peace and quiet, good temp's and humidity, and cozy hiding places, he should settle down. The forum is full of various things you can try to get him to eat. But it might take him longer than you think to feel safe and comfortable enough.

  9. #18
    Sometimes It Hurts... PitOnTheProwl's Avatar
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    Re: BP is trying to escape at night and won't eat?

    Quote Originally Posted by Slytherin_python View Post
    His temperatures and humidity is pretty much on the dot, going by everything that people have told me.

    the temp on the hot side is regulated by a heating device/monitor thing. I don't know what it's called
    Unless I missed it, probably not.
    The surface temperature that your snake can touch shouldn't be over 95 degrees and that is pushing the higher limit.
    Where is the probe located?


  10. #19
    Registered User Slytherin_python's Avatar
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    Re: BP is trying to escape at night and won't eat?

    He seems WAY more relaxed now that I've pretty much left him alone all day other than removing the mouse earlier. He isn't trying to escape at all and is currently in his hide.

    the probe is just outside the hide (which is on the warm side)

  11. #20
    Registered User WildLore's Avatar
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    tried frozen thaw in a dark room i found my picky eater does best when given a frozen thaw mouse/rat when i put her in a separate cage in a dark room with no activity whatsoever.

    someone else suggested splitting the head of the rodent
    "learn so much about your subject that you don't need the reference anymore" Milt Kahl

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