It's a pictoral report on an eggbound indigo from Wrapped Up in Reptiles webpage.
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It's a pictoral report on an eggbound indigo from Wrapped Up in Reptiles webpage.
Very cool! Cooler still that she survived!
I want to absorb as much info on this subject as I can since I hope to breed some of my drys in the future. It sounds like just about everyone who's breeding drys on a regular basis will be faced with this situation at some point.
Thanks,
Chris
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Gregory S. Hake
The first thing that strikes me are the two malformed eggs. How many people have done a necropsy to find the cause of egg binding? How many have found severely malformed eggs? If this is a common factor we might have a good piece to the Dry husbandry puzzle. Most people have some theory about egg binding, usually related to size, age, nutrition, etc., but how about those eggs? Your thoughts?
Josh.
Anette was very reluctant to sell me this snake. After a very long time we worked out a deal and she is now mine. Aside from a nasty scare she is great a real sweetheart of a snake. Her appetite is "well" lets just say very strong.
When she sheds I do have to soak her after to get what didn't around the scare.
Though this snake will never breed she still will play an inportant role for her species as an educational ambassador in our school and mall talks up here in Canada.
Rdean
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