Welcome to the forum.
Thanks for your kind words about Limon, he was very special to me.
When I first got him, I knew absolutely nothing about him, we learned from each other.
First things first, ALL specimens are wild caught animals, therefore the first steps to success are to....
1. Check your animal over carefully for snake mites upon arrival, do not introduce into a collection right away.
2. get a stool sample to your local herp vet for parasite testing.
3. they are mostly arboreal, so a tall cage with a tree or fake vines is essential if you want your snake to thrive!!! (Very very important)
4. their natural habitat is Asian rain forest, so they require some good humidity, I misted my cage daily, and it has very little airflow, enough to keep the air from going stale, but NO screen (I drilled small holes in the wood, other than that it was almost sealed)
5. The only food item I could ever get mine to eat was the common night crawler, Limon would eat from 2-4 large night crawlers DAILY.
Insects and pinkie mice were a waste of time, even scented, he would not even touch them.
6. Keep the cage a uniform 85-95 degrees, DO NOT USE A BASKING LAMP!! your snake will wrap around the bulb and get severely burned!!!!!!
I used a large heat rock on the bottom of the cage buried in soil to keep the cage warm, UTH would be ideal also.
7. for our cage I used a 12 volt LED lamp, it illuminated the cage well, produced no heat and could never shock my snake with electricity.
8. Keep the water bowl changed and filled with fresh water at all times.
9. repti bark or clean earth soil are the most ideal substrates to use, aspen or coconut fiber will stick to the worms and get ingested by your snake.
10. this species is very tolerant of handling ,at least mine was, there may be exceptions.
Feel free to contact me at any time, send me a PM and I will give you my phone numbers if needed.