|  |
Notices |
Welcome to the sSnakeSs community. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.
|
10-18-04, 09:03 AM
|
#1
|
Member
Join Date: Aug-2004
Location: Calgary, Alberta
Age: 43
Posts: 90
|
The golden corn years
My female corn is getting up in years....middle aged I guess. She is about 9 years of age. Breeding age can be up to 10 or 11 I have read. Would it be better not to have her breed at this age?
|
|
|
10-18-04, 02:17 PM
|
#2
|
Member
Join Date: Dec-2003
Location: Lancaster PA
Posts: 474
|
i was told that it matters of how big the snake is, 36ish inches. I thought they could breed at age 1ish or untill they get big enough...
__________________
John Nguyen
|
|
|
10-18-04, 02:19 PM
|
#3
|
Member
Join Date: Apr-2003
Location: Toronto, Ontario
Age: 37
Posts: 5,322
|
No, ive been told 3 years is when its safe to start. Deffinetly not one year.
Not sure if it can get to old to breed though..sorry!
__________________
Adam
|
|
|
10-18-04, 02:33 PM
|
#4
|
Member
Join Date: Aug-2004
Posts: 203
|
You are both wrong. You dont breed a snake based on the age but rather the weight and size of the snake is the main factor. Sure the age has something to do with basing your opinion on a good time to try breeding but the determining factor is all in the weight and health of the snake.
|
|
|
10-18-04, 02:50 PM
|
#5
|
Member
Join Date: Oct-2003
Location: Southern Ontario
Age: 47
Posts: 1,268
|
Why isn't anyone answering his question. His snake is 9 YEARS OLD. Wants to know when to STOP breeding it. Sorry, I don't have an answer for you. If she is till looking good, I would maybe give her a season or more.
|
|
|
10-18-04, 03:42 PM
|
#6
|
Member
Join Date: Jan-2004
Location: Fredericton, N.B.
Posts: 808
|
Hi, I would say you are fine to breed her, When the snake becomes to old too produce you will know, she either will not breed for you, or she will being too produce only slugs, then you know she’s past her prime.
Devon
|
|
|
10-18-04, 03:53 PM
|
#7
|
Member
Join Date: Aug-2004
Location: Calgary, Alberta
Age: 43
Posts: 90
|
She is getting pretty thin, despite upping her feeding a bit, thats why I was wondering if the stress of egg laying would be too much.
|
|
|
10-18-04, 04:06 PM
|
#8
|
Member
Join Date: Feb-2004
Location: Burlington, Vermont
Age: 43
Posts: 508
|
If thats the case, I wouldnt attempt it. Last thing you want is to have her eggbound.
__________________
Jessica "Jess" Bruce
True WC Vermonter
|
|
|
10-18-04, 05:23 PM
|
#9
|
Member
Join Date: Jun-2003
Location: Calgary, AB
Age: 49
Posts: 5,638
|
My adult female corn, who shot out 2 clutches for me this year, is of unknown age, but I assume her to be somewhere between 5 and 10. She is skinny as hell - even though I give her 90-100g rats every meal, she stays skinny. Take the overall health of the snake into consideration, fatten her up (hopefully she won't have an INSANE metabolism like mine has) and breed away.
__________________
- Ken LePage
http://www.invictusart.com
http://www.invictusexotics.com
|
|
|
10-18-04, 05:36 PM
|
#10
|
Member
Join Date: Mar-2004
Location: Saskatchewan
Age: 42
Posts: 115
|
Ok, so then at what length/weight is it ok to breed them at?
__________________
0.0.1 Red Tail Green Rat Snake, 2.1.2 Corn Snakes, 0.0.1 Albino Banded Cali. Kingsnake, 0.0.1 Pueblan Milksnake, 0.0.1 Yellow Rat Snake, 0.1 Veiled Chameleon, 1.0 African Spur Thigh Tortoise, 0.0.1 Crested Gecko, 0.1.1 Armadillo Lizards, 0.0.1 Leopard Gecko, 0.0.1 Tiger Salamander
|
|
|
10-18-04, 07:10 PM
|
#11
|
Member
Join Date: Mar-2002
Location: British Colombia
Age: 43
Posts: 2,525
Country:
|
Ok hooter you are wrong too.
Age, sizeweight all play a role.
Humans hit puberty not at a certain age, but when the body fat reaches a certain percentage. This means that nine year olds can bear children, but should they?
Now corn snakes on the other hands can breed at 18 mos and at three feet and 200g, but does this mean it is healthy? Sure, she may lay eggs for you a few years, if you are lucky, and she doesn't get eggbound the first year from lack of proper muscle, but a quick death is what you are asking for.
As for snakes that are too old. How is her muscle tone? Her general condition? Is she losing weight? How thin is thin? What is her weight?
I would say if she's in good condition, then by all means try it. If she's geriatric, then don't, you could kill her.
__________________
~Katt
|
|
|
10-18-04, 08:39 PM
|
#12
|
Member
Join Date: Jun-2003
Location: SW Florida
Posts: 72
|
Actually, It all matters on Length. It is safe once females are 36" long; Ive also had a 24" male breed before and all the egss hatched. Thats what my experience has led me to. Interestingly, I have had 0 year olds breed for me (Males and Females). Yes, thats right I have bred a snake before it has turned 1 years old. To do this, I power fed it as soon as it hatched every 3 days a pinky. Within a month it was on a pinky with little fuz on it and later a fuzzy. Few months it was on hoppers (still every 3 days) and then it ate a adult mouse 10 days before I put it down for a months' brumation (i brumate my snakes for 2 months; it was coming in for the second month). When it came out of brumaion, I fed it a smaller adult the waited 1 week and fed it an adult every3-5 days. When it shed i tried to breed it, it was interested but was unexperienced. It took a few more tries , but it bred. The male i bred it to was a Hypo het Lavender. She laid 8 eggs, all hatched. BTW she is a Hypo. The babies came out Hypo 66% POSS Het Lavender.
|
|
|
10-18-04, 08:44 PM
|
#13
|
Member
Join Date: Mar-2002
Location: British Colombia
Age: 43
Posts: 2,525
Country:
|
Wow, reading that bothered me a lot. I'm sure I won't be making any purchases from a breeder whose breeding ethic bothers me so.
I do not see the reason in breeding an animal that young, except for money.
__________________
~Katt
|
|
|
10-18-04, 08:54 PM
|
#14
|
Member
Join Date: Jun-2003
Location: SW Florida
Posts: 72
|
1st, all the offspring from that clutch had a 100% hatch rate. They all have a 100% survival rate. I have not lost any due to birth defects or anything else.
2nd, a friend of mine who is the best at Cornsnakes regardless what you think, does this power feeding to get his projects to breed faster. I dont know if you have heard of him. He created a Striped hypo lavender, Striped Creamsicle, Motley Creamsicle, Striped Cinnamin, and many other secret projects im not gonna tell you. I wanted to test it for my self. So I did. And it works perfectly.
3rd, there is nothing ethically wrong with this, despite your beliefs,with this. I didnt force it to eat, it ate everything I gave it. I didnt force it to breed, it willingly bred after trying. I just didnt do anything of the likes of what you speak.
Lastly, watch what you are saying. You are getting close to slander written form. Keep slanderous opinions to yourself.
Last edited by ultimatecorns; 10-18-04 at 09:07 PM..
|
|
|
10-18-04, 09:05 PM
|
#15
|
Member
Join Date: Jun-2003
Location: Oliver, BC
Age: 35
Posts: 970
|
 So they all died?
 I think you mean %100 survival rate. Personally I don't agree with that method, whatever is best for the snakes right?
-TammyR
__________________
Tammy Rehbein
-You can search all day for something and never find it, only to see it in the most obvious of places after you've stopped looking.-
|
|
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 03:19 AM.
Powered by vBulletin® ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

Copyright © 2002-2023, Hobby Solutions.
|
 |