How big of a tub you use/Yes sir I kept them together.I just separate them like I do with all my non venomous and put them in my steralite "feeding" tub
How big of a tub you use/Yes sir I kept them together.I just separate them like I do with all my non venomous and put them in my steralite "feeding" tub
No, at those temps a snake native to a temperature climate will naturally go off-feed and brumate. Brumation temps do not need to be cold. I keep my snakes in my bedroom, and night-time winter temps don't drop below 65, otherwise that would be too cold for ME! My native Colubrids still stop feeding sometime between late October and mid-November, regardless. I check up on them now and then, and keep offering water, and if we have a prolonged warm spell(which happens in SC-don't know about CO), I will offer them food, but most will not eat until March or even April. They do just seem to "know", though how they do this is beyond me. I have lights on after dark, which would seem to mimic a long daylight, and I keep light-blocking shades on the windows which blocks out natural sunlight, otherwise I would not be able to sleep, but they still know when fall has arrived and will stop feeding even if the weather is still warm. I don't really have to do anything. I do switch off the lights on the Boas and Pythons now, which stimilulates them to breed, since fall is their mating season(unlike our native snakes).hey PBL, question about replicating brumation in captivity with WC snakes. with normal house temps (60 at night), is there anything more i need to do to simulate this or will the snake "know" as you had sort of mentioned? the snake has already stopped eating a month or so ago.
No, at those temps a snake native to a temperature climate will naturally go off-feed and brumate. Brumation temps do not need to be cold. I keep my snakes in my bedroom, and night-time winter temps don't drop below 65, otherwise that would be too cold for ME! My native Colubrids still stop feeding sometime between late October and mid-November, regardless. I check up on them now and then, and keep offering water, and if we have a prolonged warm spell(which happens in SC-don't know about CO), I will offer them food, but most will not eat until March or even April. They do just seem to "know", though how they do this is beyond me. I have lights on after dark, which would seem to mimic a long daylight, and I keep light-blocking shades on the windows which blocks out natural sunlight, otherwise I would not be able to sleep, but they still know when fall has arrived and will stop feeding even if the weather is still warm. I don't really have to do anything. I do switch off the lights on the Boas and Pythons now, which stimilulates them to breed, since fall is their mating season(unlike our native snakes).
pitbulllady
I recently got some eastern Diamond backs (3) and some western/eastern crosses(3) about 2 weeks ago.They all ate twice like they should,"but the largest male eastern male still has not eaten yet
Still very active and smells prey item but turns his nose up and slithers a way
I hoping he is about to shed,I almost typed molt,but it is not in blue yet
Hate to force feed if its going in dormant state
Give him another week?
cool will do.I am trying to get a widow,used to have them around here like crazy.the southernhis clock might be telling him it's time to go dormant. if food is offered and he keeps refusing, let him be. try maybe offering food at warm spells every month or so?
you'll see a lot for sale for really cheap during the summertime.cool will do.I am trying to get a widow,used to have them around here like crazy.the southern
but now I want to keep one,and they all ran away from me
I see you are the man on here with them,and wanting to purchase some, any suggestions?