Quote:
Originally Posted by Twisted Mister
For whatever reason I can’t figure out this posting system. I posted the other day the answers to bcr229’s questions but must have done something wrong. I’ve had her over 8+ yrs and found her in the street, while her owner had just come down from an adjacent apt house. The young women told me that she wouldn’t be able to keep the pet due to its continued escape prowess and her mom’s disgust for slithering surprises. She asked if I wanted the snake and I said sure, so the history is unknown of this pet.
She has recently improved after a short period of a respiratory infection with the increase of temperature and length of time her heaters/lamps were introduced into her enclosure. Her temperature ranges from the low 50s at night to her @10-12 hrs of 78-80* at the base of the tank.
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Ok... so you have a boa constrictor imperator (BCI) in a glass tank at lower than optimum temperatures with heat lamps providing what little heat she's getting, which means your humidity is likely too low as well. Yeah, that will throw any boa off food. Also if she's only three feet long at eight years old something is very, very wrong... or you don't have a boa constrictor, got pics?
Her temperature should be 78*F on the low side, 88-90*F basking spot, with humidity 50-60% in the enclosure. Enclosure temps should not swing with day/night temps unless you're cooling the animals for breeding, which isn't really needed for BCI's anyway.
Cut out the Epsom salt soaks, they're not needed and the salt will dry her out even more.
This care sheet has some good information:
Colombian Red Tail Boa (Boa constrictor imperator))