Hi Joey -
Based on the photo and your description, yes, that is a burn. And the affected area comprises more than just the obvious blackened/charred tissue. If you’ll look cranially to the discolored areas (to the right in your photo), you can see that scales adjacent to the scutes appear to have blistered. At any rate, they are abnormally engorged with fluid.
If you are not going to take this snake to a veterinarian, I would recommend that you:
Correct the husbandry problem. This burn did not occur from a temperature of 93 degrees. I’m guessing at least 110-120 degrees where the snake was coiled. If you could precisely describe your set-up, someone will tell you how to fix it properly.
Put the snake on a plain paper substrate until it has healed and keep the surroundings scrupulously clean.
Slather on an antiseptic ointment. I like Betadine ointment (the generic name is povodine-iodine ointment), but I’ve found it hard to find on occasion. Otherwise, use something like a standard triple antibiotic ointment. I think Silvadene cream may be best of all, but is more expensive and usually requires a prescription.
Change the drinking water often to encourage plenty of fluid intake.
Offer food as normal. If all goes well, with each succeeding shed, the area should heal up, but may not have totally normal scalation.
Please bear in mind though, that the main problems with bad burns come from fluid loss and with infection. We have no way of knowing from looking at that photo if your snake now has some systemic infection that only injectable antibiotics would cure.
Good luck,
Joan
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