ReptiBeck
Active Member
Well as said before don't panic, they can go a long time without food but you really do need to get a few things fixed up.
I know i do and i acknowledged that, will be doing it tomorrow
Well as said before don't panic, they can go a long time without food but you really do need to get a few things fixed up.
Although I've never used one I'm not a fan of those little glass enclosures at all. There has been quite a few threads this year regarding young snakes not eating for their newby owners and the common link has been glass enclosures. Click clack on a heat mat or cord for the first 12 months or so then give them something pretty to look at.
He's too big for a click clack and im not a 'newby', i have had a snake before and three lizards
A week might just simply be too soon mate.
Some snakes will take it in a week, some will take a month, my water python and Jag both took a couple of months, but my Albino and Woma ate in the first week. Now they're all smashing in quail, rats and mice.
The first snake you get that doesn't eat is a bit worrying, but as soon as you watch them wolfing down food when they've settled in, you learn. It takes them a bit to get used to the new temperatures, tanks, smells and whatnot. I put mine in enclosures that where a bit bigger than what they where used to, hence how long it took, but it's all to do with snake.
Heat does pay a big part in it, but the snakes going to start when it wants to.
Only get concerned if it starts looking to be sluggish or weak.
Just keep trying, and have a Woma or cat there ready to eat the mice if it fails.
I think a few months might still put you in the newbie class for snakes. I don't think your Lizard experience can really be transferred to snakes.
i also have experience with other peoples snakes, including trouble eaters and some with mites etc
I think it's more that people don't appreciate a somewhat condescending tone that can often accompany said ideas, intended or no.
I think people need to not take things personally on an Internet forum. If the advice is sound extract that out of the post and forget the rest. Ultimately if it is advice that someone wants and that is what they get then they should be happy. If it is something that is going to help you have a healthier and happier snake then who cares what the person who gave it thinks about you.
It always amazes me in here ...they put a page up asking for help n ideas ...and when given ideas on what to do ....they claim they already know ...well if you already knew ...why do a post and ask ? ...then I looked at the name and age n realised ,this young lady is a teenager hence the 'I already know ' reply..
Then why are you in such a panic about this one? If you have friends with snakes, get one of them to come over and check your setup out for you. Otherwise I think you need to stop posting for a few hours, get your temps sorted, maybe add a bit of privacy to the glass walls and see what you come up with. I still think you have just missed the lead up signs of it going into shed. That and temps are your two most basic factors to my way of thinking.
How long ago was its last shed and how many feeds has it had since?
It is most likely temp/stress related but it could be shedding even if you don't think it looks like it.
The reason I suggested shed was partly because my snake doesn't seem to get the milky eye scales and it is her behaviour more than any othr sign that lets me know that she is about to shed. As beck hasn't had this snake very long she wouldn't be aware of what its mood/behaviour is like during a shed cycle. I think she also posted earlier the stuff you just asked about.
Enter your email address to join: