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Re: Tips & Tricks
Something I heard a while back and used effectively with my Burms and Retics was to not give them any hides ..
I put loads of branches and bark pieces which provided quiet / safe areas but no hide entrances for them to leap out at you
Worked wonderfully well for me
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Re: Tips & Tricks
Originally Posted by Zincubus
Something I heard a while back and used effectively with my Burms and Retics was to not give them any hides ..
I put loads of branches and bark pieces which provided quiet / safe areas but no hide entrances for them to leap out at you
Worked wonderfully well for me
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
actually started doing this with my female by accident since she has recently outgrown the largest hide i could currently find with her and i would have to say - i do think there is v much something to this because i have noticed she doesn’t get “territorial” let’s say, in the same manner as she ordinarily would
Last edited by YungRasputin; 04-12-2023 at 09:09 AM.
het for nothing but groovy
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The Following User Says Thank You to YungRasputin For This Useful Post:
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Re: Tips & Tricks
Originally Posted by YungRasputin
actually started doing this with my female by accident since she has recently outgrown the largest hide i could currently find with her and i would have to say - i do think there is v much something to this because i have noticed she doesn’t get “territorial” let’s say, in the same manner as she ordinarily would
I wonder if the issue is really being "territorial"? I think it's more likely that now (without the hide) she's not caught off guard? It does make sense to me that hides might make a snake, or some snakes anyway, feel more defensive- hides give the illusion of privacy & snakes may "forget" that we're still lurking nearby. Snakes evolved with these instincts (to hide) & we weren't originally in the picture.
I don't keep giant pythons so the question of providing hides might well be different for them. All my snakes have hides, but snakes like rat snakes are so nosy (frequently watching me- I'm obviously very entertaining ), they're not surprised by my occasional invasion of their space. It sounds like a good thing to consider (for safety) when dealing with very large snakes.
Rudeness is the weak man's imitation of strength.
Eric Hoffer (1902 - 1983)
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The Following User Says Thank You to Bogertophis For This Useful Post:
YungRasputin (04-12-2023)
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Re: Tips & Tricks
Originally Posted by Bogertophis
I wonder if the issue is really being "territorial"? I think it's more likely that now (without the hide) she's not caught off guard? It does make sense to me that hides might make a snake, or some snakes anyway, feel more defensive- hides give the illusion of privacy & snakes may "forget" that we're still lurking nearby. Snakes evolved with these instincts (to hide) & we weren't originally in the picture.
v good counter-point, will have to think about this
I don't keep giant pythons so the question of providing hides might well be different for them. All my snakes have hides, but snakes like rat snakes are so nosy (frequently watching me- I'm obviously very entertaining ), they're not surprised by my occasional invasion of their space. It sounds like a good thing to consider (for safety) when dealing with very large snakes.
from my experiences so far i do think it’s a bit species dependent because while removing standard hides has been working for my Burms i think the opposite is true for my Afrocks who are real shy/flighty so hides have been essential to reduce stress and make them feel comfortable
het for nothing but groovy
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