W
wokka
Guest
My involvement in reptiles is reducing as I free up my time to travel in my twilight years.Through Rodentfarm I still have an interest in larger snakes feeding Olive BHPs and now, indirectly even Oenpellis. Feeding about 100 adult individuals can use a few hundred Jumbo rats which is both costly and time consuming. The majority of our large snakes are now fed rabbits which has cut down our workload substantially. We now feed a large food item between 700 grams and 1.5kilos each month instead of more regular feeds each week or so.This cuts down on the cleaning as animals deficate once a month instead of weekly. Large food items produce large poos, although many of the larger snakes live in outdoor aviaries. It is easier to let a snake out on the grass to relieve itself a week after feeding than to have a kilo plus of waste smeared around the cage.
I think it also gives the animals digestive system "time off" between feeds, which probably mimics the inconsistent availability of feed in the wild. Anecdotally there is always the arguement about old rats being fat whilst the rabbits we feed are in their prime and lean, although I have yet to see any research to say that fat is bad for snakes and it is likely that many of the wild food items are made up of the sick or aged more mature prey.
On Home - Rodent Farm Jumbo rats are $10 which translates to $30 odd a kilo ( and they are the cheapest size rat per kilo) whereas extra large rabbits are $20 and so 2/3 the price of the Jumbo Rats. (Smaller rats are $40 plus a kilo) Add to that the labour saving and likely health benefits it seems to me rabbits are a more efficient feed, particularly for larger snakes.
I'd be interested to hear the experiences of others in feeding large snakes.
I think it also gives the animals digestive system "time off" between feeds, which probably mimics the inconsistent availability of feed in the wild. Anecdotally there is always the arguement about old rats being fat whilst the rabbits we feed are in their prime and lean, although I have yet to see any research to say that fat is bad for snakes and it is likely that many of the wild food items are made up of the sick or aged more mature prey.
On Home - Rodent Farm Jumbo rats are $10 which translates to $30 odd a kilo ( and they are the cheapest size rat per kilo) whereas extra large rabbits are $20 and so 2/3 the price of the Jumbo Rats. (Smaller rats are $40 plus a kilo) Add to that the labour saving and likely health benefits it seems to me rabbits are a more efficient feed, particularly for larger snakes.
I'd be interested to hear the experiences of others in feeding large snakes.
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