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Rehydrating question

torayoma Apr 15, 2005 05:35 PM

My baby red tail escaped at SOME point and I found him outside of his cage and not in the closet his cage is located, on Monday. He was in the process of shedding and SEVERELY dehydrated because I am a BAAAD owner and don't check on him every day like I should.

Anyways, I immediately found a deli cup, punched some holes in it and placed warm and wet paper towels on the bottom. I grabbed a heating pad and put them all together to make an emercency rehydrating cage/set up/thing.

He's still in there. Wednesday required me to pull off the shed skin that wouldn't come off after two days of intense hydro-therapy. While I did it, I noticed he was quite limp and not very snake-like with the need to investigate the immediate surroundings so I put him back in.

He's alert, tongue flicking and probably itching to get back into his normal cage but is there a limit to how long I should expose him to rehyrdation time? It doesn't really say anything about how long you should treat a snake in the 'What's wrong with my snake' book, just how you're supposed to treat him. Personally, my way is cheaper and just as effective.

And is there really such a thing as an 'escape-proof' cage for juveniles? This is the fifth time he's gotten out despite having a slid-n-lock lid, those stupid little clamp locks and duct tape securing the places where he could possibly sneak out. I don't know how he does it either....he's not natural.

And just because I have ZERO experience with male snakes, how do I know I'm feeding him enough? With my former juvenile boa, she packed away litters of 7-11 fresh pinks in a single sitting, while he only eats two. I read that females eat more but the lack of his...I guess, interest is just mind blowing. I've offered him seven pinks and he only took two. Should I pack him up and cart him off to my nearest vet to see if there's something wrong with him?

Replies (6)

SHHAWKE Apr 15, 2005 09:12 PM

i would just give him a nice bath every day, but make sure the water temp is not cold or too hot...
yes their are escape proof cages... their are still neodishea cages out their for sale, and vision cages are escape proof as well... their are tons of escape proof cages...
so you dont know how long your boa was out??? hmmmmmmmmmmmm!
i have NEVER offered my snakes more then one meal a day... you snake will probably be just fine eating just one meal of affropriate size... you are probably causing more stress then anything by trying to feed more then one meal at a time... plus you can overfeed...

shiloh

torayoma Apr 15, 2005 09:40 PM

Yeah...I know...I need to move his cage OUT of the closet and into my room so I can look in on him every day...he's my only reptile in the closet.

He seems to be doing fine with the pick and choose thing, when he's done he just starts moving to where ever he wants to go. I'll take it into consideration, about one meal a day. I dunno if my mouse supply could handle that type of stress though.

Okay, so thanks for actually GIVING me some advice instead of posting a pic and prattling on and on about how your boa is double pos for het or some other crap I don't need to know. If I can, I'll post some pics of him because for a Columbian, he's got a lot of pink along the sides.

beastie Apr 15, 2005 10:23 PM

What he meant was one FOOD Item per feeding... i.e. one rat fuzzy per week, etc. it sounds to us like you're feeding way too much, you should be feeding one rat per week, and that rat should be about as big around as your boa, they can handle it.

too many food items, while a boa will fit them in, can cause long-term health problems like obesity and kidney damage that can greatly shorten their life.

good luck!

bc

SHHAWKE Apr 15, 2005 10:29 PM

.

torayoma Apr 15, 2005 10:57 PM

That's what I meant but he isn't big enough to eat rats yet...maybe a rat pup but those are expensive and I have to pre-order from my local herp shop. I just moved him back into his cage and he's looks pretty happy.

While I was handling him, I noticed a dent in his eye. I thought it was water at first but then the closer I looked at it, the more it became clear it WAS a dent. I dunno how he got it, probably when he pulled his daring escape. I have a vet appointment on tuesday, the soonest I could get him in to see the head honcho reptile dude where I live. He takes care of the zoo herps so this guy knows his stuff.

Blah...I don't like juveniles...they get into so much trouble. Why can't he be a good snake like my suriname red femme? She just....basks in the sun and moves around every now and then. I'd post a pic to see if she was worth breeding but I have no camera and I'm jobless.

shhawke Apr 15, 2005 11:25 PM

i have never noticed the age or sex of an animal to make any difference... if they are in a proper enclosure the movement should be about the same...
also rats come in lots of different sizes, not to mention the mouse population out their... i have a vary picky pair of carpet pythons and they are no bigger around then a "Sharpie" permanent marker and all they will eat is hoppers... when in reality they should be eating pinkies still...
the point we are trying to make is that you dont need to make your snake fat... if all he can handle is a rat pup then give him 1 rat pup a week...
also... how are rat pups expensive??? they cost .75 a piece here...
shiloh

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