Posted by:
diseasedstran
at Mon Aug 18 18:28:24 2003 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by diseasedstran ]
Most of my snakes know the dog as well as they do me.
From hatchlings , if i get them that young, I start to put them nose to nose with the dogs.
One person hold the dog. One hold the snake.
If he seems like he's pulling back into an "S" to strike , I just grab hold of him and pull him back out strait.
i do this every time we take them out for about 20 minutes.
Anymore we dont even worry about it. The dog doesnt pay any attention when the snakes crawl by , and the snakes dont pay not attention to the dog's.
>>I am just responding about the dog thing. I know people who pet their dog and cat and then handle their snake when it is little so it gets use to that smell, but I agree I would never let my burm around my dog. My dog is 120lbs and my snake is about 5 ft now and I will never let them around eachother. One if the snake strikes now my dog will tear it up, plus the damage the snake can do if it nails her on the nose. When I bring my snakes out I block the dog off from the room I am in. Its a good thing to, when my dog went in the snake room the other day my burm came out of its hiding place and shot out at the glass did not strike but thought food was coming. So, as the person before me stated not a good idea its trouble. ----- Seth Mason.
Do lesbian frogs think they taste like chicken too ?
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