It should be fine Jeff. Do look at the whole picture with your picky feeder. Things like light levels, levels of traffic near this particular snake, housing, temps, humidity, etc. Sometimes it's various things at work that are not encouraging the snake to feel secure enough to hunt and small tweaks can be just enough to get it going. Here's an example, though it's from an 07 hatchling boa...

Morgaine belongs to another forum member, we're simply snakesitting for Lynn. Morgaine came in a lovely, though quite small hatchling and even after a quiet week was refusing to eat. Now this is someone else's snake, a small boa that I wanted to see eating as soon as possible. I stepped back, thought about all the factors that go into a feeding situation and decided that one factor that might be an issue was the Iris tubs we use. Morgaine came out of breeder using racks, so was likely far more used to a darker rack situation.

Simple fix...I grabbed an old dark blue pillowcase, draped it over a good part of her enclosure (leaving room of course for ventilation), gave it a couple of days to make sure she was settling and the temps/humidity weren't changing due to the pillowcase and then introduced a prey item. I covered her entire enclosure with the pillowcase while the prey was in there and within moments she was all over the prey. I left the pillowcase on until she was done eating then folded it back a bit. We do this every time we feed her now and Morgaine is now eating like there's no tomorrow and has even started hitting her prey before I can even get the lid snapped down and the pillowcase on again LOL.

Sometimes it's just little tricks that work for that particular snake once you figure out what might be affecting the snake.