Posted by:
DMong
at Wed Jul 7 20:40:50 2010 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by DMong ]
"Doug, You are mistaken. I house all my brooks together year round but never new hatclings after shed. They certainly will eat each other and it is a bad idea to house them when they are striking at every movement around them"
Uhhh, Rainer!, go back and re-read what I said very carefully this time.
How the hell am I "mistaken", when we are talking about the exact same thing here...HATCHLINGS!?? Your above quote says the exact same thing I just mentioned in your second sentence..LOL!
We are not talking about older brooks, the dude asked about his hatchlings being housed together, remember?
Anyway, ya won't see me housing any of my brooks hatchlings together(or any getula for that matter). Anyone that wants do do it can be my guest, but they certainly can't get on here and say that I told 'em it can never happen. I don't guess those other very well-known herpetoculturist's we all know were imagining things either when it happened..
I challenge ANYONE to put their brooks hatchlings together, and let them all hang-out and "befriend" each other for a while as their belly yolk slowly gets depleted, then do a snake count after this as the days continue to go by..LMAO!
~Doug ----- "a snake in the grass is a GOOD thing"
my website -serpentinespecialties.webs.com
[ Hide Replies ]
|