Re: Question about our ball python
First off: Those look like pine shavings. Pine shavings give off toxic chemicals, if you want to keep him on wood chips you should switch to aspen.
Second, here are some things to try to get him to eat.
1. If you're feeding live, try feeding dead.
2. If you're feeding dead, try feeding live.
3. Expose the brain of the rat (pre killed only!). This can be easily done by covering the rat in a towel, hitting it lightly with a meat tenderizer on the head to crush the skull, then puncturing the head with a knife or ice pick. This sounds disgusting (and it is), but it is a very very effective way to encourage feeding.
4. Feed him in a dark, quiet room. If you can't move him to a room that will be dark and quiet, cover his aquarium with a dark colored blanket (or several), and do your best to limit vibration.
5. Get a rat pup (eyes still shut) and a paper grocery sack. Take a hole punch and punch a bunch of air holes in the paper sack. Put the snake, and the rat pup in the sack, put the sack in his enclosure, and leave him over night. (turn off lights, and keep the room quiet for best results)
6. If feeding frozen/thawed, warm the rat up above room temperature by sealing it in a sandwich bag and floating the bag on warm (90-110 degree) water until the rat has warmed up to that temperature.
7. If using pre-killed or frozen/thawed, try gripping the rat at the nape of the neck with a pair of feeding tongs, and wiggling it around.
8. Try hamsters or gerbils. They smell closer to their natural prey than rats do. (But hamsters and gerbils should not be fed live, they're vicious little buggers who can kill your snake)
Also, it could be environmental, but that's been said already. We can't really do anything on that front without knowing... well... all those things mykee said.
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