View Full Version : Emergency please respond ASAP
Shauna0522
02-08-18, 12:26 AM
So my boa is trying to eat her mouse sideways she didn't grab it right she let go then she grabbed it back by the butt I've heard that that can cause a lot of damage if they eat them backwards please help I don't know what to do how do I get her to let go
Shauna0522
02-08-18, 12:38 AM
Got it I may have stressed her out a little bit but I got her to open up
Shauna0522
02-08-18, 01:01 AM
So she is eating the mouse now but she got all kinds of substrate all over the mouse and is now eating it will this hurt her?
TeamSlitherin
02-08-18, 01:32 AM
Leave her be. Eating the mouse backwards won't hurt her and neither will a little substrate. She's more likely to be injured by someone trying to get the mouse back from her than by ingesting a little substrate.
craigafrechette
02-08-18, 05:36 AM
No need to worry. Next time just let her eat.
Jim Smith
02-08-18, 08:02 AM
The only real danger from your snake eating a mouse backwards is if you are feeding live prey items which could easily turn a bite your snake inflicting serious injuries. If you're feeding FT prey items, leave it alone, it will figure things out all by itself.
richardhind
02-08-18, 08:42 AM
Loads of my boas have taken them backwards at some point, but all have been frozen thawed, so they not going to try escape
Quite literally nothing to worry about. ;)
Shauna0522
02-08-18, 11:52 PM
Ok yes I feed f/t, but the mouse wasn't just backwards it was also sideways and I thought if she ate it it would rip her open so anyway i got her to release the mouse then put her back in her enclosure and shockingly she did end up eating the mouse. She ate it backward and yes I did just let her go. I kinda figured the substrate really wouldn't hurt her just since I'm sure they end up getting stuff in their mouth when they are eating in the wild but I just thought I'd ask. Thank you for all of your replies.
Scubadiver59
02-09-18, 06:03 PM
You fret too much--if the snake can't get it in sideways, it will move to the ends of the prey.
My black/white CA Striped King did just that this past feeding...it took a small pinky mouse from the side and was just getting around to moving to the head end when I came back in the room 30min later. I left it alone and then, when I offered a second one, it took it from the "correct" end.
Relax, nature is funny, and snakes are no exception.
Ok yes I feed f/t, but the mouse wasn't just backwards it was also sideways and I thought if she ate it it would rip her open so anyway i got her to release the mouse then put her back in her enclosure and shockingly she did end up eating the mouse. She ate it backward and yes I did just let her go. I kinda figured the substrate really wouldn't hurt her just since I'm sure they end up getting stuff in their mouth when they are eating in the wild but I just thought I'd ask. Thank you for all of your replies.
Shauna0522
02-09-18, 09:29 PM
You fret too much--if the snake can't get it in sideways, it will move to the ends of the prey.
My black/white CA Striped King did just that this past feeding...it took a small pinky mouse from the side and was just getting around to moving to the head end when I came back in the room 30min later. I left it alone and then, when I offered a second one, it took it from the "correct" end.
Relax, nature is funny, and snakes are no exception.
Ok thank you I will leave it next time lol
Dumerils88
02-11-18, 12:54 AM
My coastal always hamburgers her mice (folded) lol it’s hilarious
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