JasonL
Almost Legendary
don't have scales??
here's a pic of my stimms, hatched mid Jan. Do what you feel is best. I personally like to get all my reptile up to size asap.
Everyone has seen the posts from Shane each year "Shane@aussiepythons has done it again "tanami womas at 18 months" he has an amazing success rate and until proven right or wrong by scientific evidence i keep an open mind!
I look at it this way, i can eat only McDonald's, KFC and pizza for my entire life. I probably won't die straight away, and i will be able to breed, but i won't be healthy. I'll probably die at 40 instead of what could have been 100 and when they cut me up they will see how much damage was done to my kidneys, liver and heart.
What a poor statement MR B, No-one is saying feed them junk food, but lean nutritious rodents and birds. No different than eating 5 nutritious meals a day rather than 3!
Their is verly little scientific evidence to support your statements relating to prolapse, heart and kidney failure and pin head syndrome (completely made up term) related to a certain feeding rate. Yes fatty liver disease is a problem and primarily in reptile feeders such as BHP's and Womas (however i did read a statement the other day that said bhp's were an exception shakes head). But if fed lean food items when young this fat does not accumulate like one would think. We have been CT scanning and ultrasounding fat deposits in growing hatchlings, particularly around organs and it is vastly different to what occurs in adults.
Lets ask ourselves what is powerfeeding? What is an acceptable rate? We are all guessing. Tell a water python during a plague of rats at Fogg Dam that it should only eat this much! I've seen plenty of what you would call pin head carpets in the wild during prosperous years. It's feast or famine in the wild.
Anyway as i have stated i will reserve my judgement until i read credible peer reviewed scientific evidence as to what is an acceptable feeding rate and what is not!
And to say that Shane has some kind of talent for being able to breed snakes at 18 months is the most ridiculous thing i have ever heard in my life. Any person who pumps their snakes from the day they hatch can do it. Most people have some respect for their animals though...
A little side note, i had 3 snakes that i could have bred at 18 months this season, including a *** hot Woma, and incredible Stimmies. Seeing as i'm not motivated by money i didn't do it, i put the snakes' long term health first and that is what we all should be doing. I don't have any issue with any person making any amount of money from this hobby, but the health of our herps should always come first.
Their is verly little scientific evidence to support your statements relating to prolapse, heart and kidney failure and pin head syndrome (completely made up term) related to a certain feeding rate.
Geez MrBredli, that's quite interesting. One of the paragrahs in your reply states, along the lines of "pumping their snakes so they breed at 18 months is the most rediculous thing you have heard in your life" and those that do breed their animals at 18 months know you do have to pump your animals to get them there.
BUT, on a side note, you have 3 snakes that could have bred at 18 months of age......:?. Yet, according to you, you have RESPECT for your snakes and wouldn't pump them just to breed them at that age. Whether you chose to breed them or not is irrelevant, the fact is if they are big enough to breed, then you have Skaarfed them, or else, they wouldn't be at breeding size.
On the other hand, maybe you just think they are at breeding size but don't really know......:?
Ummm... could have bred if i had pumped them mate....
On the flip side, there is no 'scientific' evidence to suggest that it doesn't. But there are countless scattered reports from various sources that say it has caused problems with their snakes. The problem is, that not every snake that is overfed is going to drop dead at 12 months, so how does one provide proof? Only a case here and a case there seems to make it to the surface. You can bet your ass people like Shane will not disclose the amount of complications they have (if any), they will always say their snakes are in the best of health.
Put simply, powerfed snakes have more health complications than those that aren't. Simply because no scientific studies have been done doesn't mean there isn't a problem. That's like saying the boiling water isn't hot because i haven't put a thermometer in there yet to measure the temperature. The study you are currently doing would never have been started if not for the thousands of stories of health problems caused by overfeeding from around the world. If there wasn't a problem it quite simply wouldn't be a topic anyone would feel the need to discuss.
Oh I see, sorry my mistake.:shock: You see, I read it that they COULD have bred, assuming that if you had paired them up and attempted to breed them. But in fact they are not up to size, so therefore they WOULD not have bred if you wanted them to as they are not big enough. Bit of a difference, but all in the way it is taken. You see I could have bred my olives at 18 months too, but I didn't either.
It doesn't with people like Shane.
I have never said it doesn't although scientific proof is required MR B, The old theory of N=1 (sample size) doesn't stack up, no conclusions can be drawn from this as a direct link to power feeding! To be statistically conclusive is how one prooves it. You need a minimum of 6 samples per treatment group to determine anything statistically in biological studies.
As i said earlier the pythons in the fed to refusal group haven't dropped dead, but simply have begun to regulate their own feed intake. Obviously i can't recommend a accurate feeding rate, but hopefully using CP's as an indicator species we will be able to get a handle on what is happening!
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