MKP
01-12-19, 12:43 PM
Hello,
I need advice.
I have experience with keeping snakes/lizards as pets but never a wild caught.
I recently moved to Eastern, WA and there are many different types of snakes.
There are so many snakes being killed by people here its dismaying.
It was late October in the afternoon and the temp was 51 degrees. I saw this baby Gopher snake on the road and knew he was not going to make it. Birds of prey or a car, was gonna get him. It was very lethargic due to the temp. Middle of the road too.
So I figure he can winter with us.
I have a 120 gallon aquarium for him.
I just want to get him through the winter and let him go on our property.
We do NOT have cats.
He has the same basic setup as a Mexican Black Kingsnake I had for 18 years. I cleaned up and disinfected the tank and gave him a hiding place, under tank heater and a sun bulb.
I tried him on some fuzzy pre-killed mice. He was not interested.
He seems pretty thin but he's active and alert.
The goal here is to keep him on his own regimen for feeding, if even just one more feed and hibernation.
Then maybe warm him up in Springtime, feed him once or twice and let him go again back to the wild.
But I've never dealt with wild caught before. Also I've never had to hibernate a snake before. (If that is what its called)
So yeah, just want him to live to see the wild again.
So I need advice.
If he doesn't feed, will he live till Spring with as thin as he seems? No ribs showing, just a typical looking juvenile Gopher snake.
Should I put him in a 'hibernation'? Or just keep him warm and try to feed him all winter?
Not sure how to get this guy to spring time alive.
Thanks for any advice
MKP
I need advice.
I have experience with keeping snakes/lizards as pets but never a wild caught.
I recently moved to Eastern, WA and there are many different types of snakes.
There are so many snakes being killed by people here its dismaying.
It was late October in the afternoon and the temp was 51 degrees. I saw this baby Gopher snake on the road and knew he was not going to make it. Birds of prey or a car, was gonna get him. It was very lethargic due to the temp. Middle of the road too.
So I figure he can winter with us.
I have a 120 gallon aquarium for him.
I just want to get him through the winter and let him go on our property.
We do NOT have cats.
He has the same basic setup as a Mexican Black Kingsnake I had for 18 years. I cleaned up and disinfected the tank and gave him a hiding place, under tank heater and a sun bulb.
I tried him on some fuzzy pre-killed mice. He was not interested.
He seems pretty thin but he's active and alert.
The goal here is to keep him on his own regimen for feeding, if even just one more feed and hibernation.
Then maybe warm him up in Springtime, feed him once or twice and let him go again back to the wild.
But I've never dealt with wild caught before. Also I've never had to hibernate a snake before. (If that is what its called)
So yeah, just want him to live to see the wild again.
So I need advice.
If he doesn't feed, will he live till Spring with as thin as he seems? No ribs showing, just a typical looking juvenile Gopher snake.
Should I put him in a 'hibernation'? Or just keep him warm and try to feed him all winter?
Not sure how to get this guy to spring time alive.
Thanks for any advice
MKP