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08-28-17, 01:07 PM
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#1
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Member
Join Date: Nov-2013
Posts: 560
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pines are here
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08-28-17, 01:28 PM
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#2
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Member
Join Date: Feb-2017
Age: 65
Posts: 1,433
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Re: pines are here
Good idea about hitting up either garden centers or stone sellers to see if they have broken pieces they'll part with for pennies on the dollar.
I'll have to look into that later this week/weekend.
Thanks!
__________________
4.7.3 Boidae | 9.15.13 Colubridae | 15.16.4 Pythonidae | 2.1.0 Canis lupus familiaris | 1.0.0 Homo Sapiens Sapiens Stultus
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08-28-17, 03:12 PM
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#3
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Member
Join Date: Nov-2013
Posts: 560
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Re: pines are here
They didn't even remember what the collection of pallet of pieces among their stone blocks and panels was lol The guy is finally like this is too much work for whatever it is worth and ran the 2 biggest pieces we grabbed as 2' panels of the cheapest thing in the computer. So it came out $2 and $3. The other I grabbed is more square still but some corners broken off.
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08-28-17, 05:39 PM
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#4
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Member
Join Date: Feb-2017
Age: 65
Posts: 1,433
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Re: pines are here
I have a few questions: what do you know about shipping restrictions for Black Pines across state lines? Aren't captive borne exempt from that? Does the Lacey Act figure into why this one seller (TN) says he can't ship out of state?
__________________
4.7.3 Boidae | 9.15.13 Colubridae | 15.16.4 Pythonidae | 2.1.0 Canis lupus familiaris | 1.0.0 Homo Sapiens Sapiens Stultus
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08-28-17, 08:50 PM
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#5
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Forum Moderator
Join Date: Jun-2013
Location: ATL
Posts: 6,744
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Re: pines are here
Very nice Pits AK. I really dig the Bulls and have seen some beautiful Northern Pine adults. I hope you'll keep us updated with pics as they grow . What's the red marking on the one critter?
__________________
0.1 Albino Bull Snake (She-RA)~ 1.0 Snow Bull Snake (Apollo)~ 1.0 Coastal Carpet Python (Chomper)~ 1.0 JCP (Shredder)~ 1.0 Bredl Python (S'ven)~ 0.1 JJ x JCP (Trinity)~ 0.1 Albino Carpet Python (Akasha)~ 1.0 Olive Python (Nigel)~1.0 Scrub Python (Klauss)~ 1.0 BCI (Monty)~ 0.1 BCO (Xena)
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08-28-17, 09:07 PM
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#6
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Member
Join Date: Nov-2013
Posts: 560
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Re: pines are here
He marked the females red behind the head and the males red on the tails and left the hatchlings together as they were shipped and picked up.
Black pines are endangered and require a federal permit to ship out of state that is hard to get. A few have but you have to be buying them for purposes that help the species basically rather than a single pet and it requires giving a lot of info. Most don't seem to get one. Some states, like IL, also have an extra in state permit on them to sell at all but I think that's rare. I only ran into it because it's the next state over (my northern pines and most of my bulls were picked up near Chicago) and someone consistently sells them. I believe you can legally buy and drive them across state lines without any permits besides the IL exception on sales. The state permit is probably easier to get given the state is known to just like to find ways to make extra money but they are a bit outside my price range just to have an endangered version of black snake and not worth dealing with the legal issues again if selling offspring.
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08-30-17, 12:57 PM
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#7
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Member
Join Date: Nov-2013
Posts: 560
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Re: pines are here
The male pine is curious but rather cautious and found gerbil fuzzies that are about twice the size of mouse fuzzies intimidating. He ate a small mouse and was done. I left the gerbils in there anyway with the mouse fuzzy when I switched the female to the bin. I came back to find she skipped the mouse and nearly had both gerbils down. The male went right back in his hide but I slid the lumpy female back in and she was everywhere including up the divider track before I had the lid secure. Then she had to threaten me and tail rattle against the side when I carefully removed her from the lip to set her back in. The enclosure I have them in has slots for 4 dividers and I only have it in half for slightly over 2' long sections.
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08-30-17, 02:49 PM
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#8
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Member
Join Date: Feb-2017
Location: Illinois
Posts: 190
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Re: pines are here
Beautiful snakes. Congrats!
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09-04-17, 01:25 AM
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#9
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Member
Join Date: Nov-2013
Posts: 560
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Re: pines are here
Well they decided rat pinkies and gerbil fuzzies aren't edible today. The female is just pissed. She came out of her cage fine but didn't eat and when I tried wiggling a rodent I got bit. She hasn't calmed down since even when I left her with the lights off. I gave her another hide, left her a gerbil I froze from the ones she ate fresh killed last time, and left the smallest rat pinky with the male but they still get lost where to find things in their 24x17" enclosures. That's why I was feeding them in a shoebox bin when I don't normally remove from the enclosure.
How long can they go without food at about 4weeks old? Mice are the worst for my rodent allergies so I don't keep them around and will have to buy prepackaged from the pet store if they insist. Not really worth a higher quality order and there are pretty much no local rodent supplies that are reliable. I got tired of the promises of supplies only to then get told they fed it all to their own snakes or sold them to everyone else. Working on switching to more predictable colony breeding african soft furred rats instead of gerbils since I can handle the lower urine output of such species. Freaking pest mice are trying to get inside as cool weather comes though and brought rat mites with them again so I have to wipe those out first.
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09-04-17, 01:56 PM
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#10
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Forum Moderator
Join Date: Jun-2013
Location: ATL
Posts: 6,744
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Re: pines are here
I surprised your pits are being stubborn A. They're usually very reliable feeders. I'm a firm believer that the hunger always wins in the end. Keep offering food every 7-10 days and they'll get with the program. Keep us posted.
__________________
0.1 Albino Bull Snake (She-RA)~ 1.0 Snow Bull Snake (Apollo)~ 1.0 Coastal Carpet Python (Chomper)~ 1.0 JCP (Shredder)~ 1.0 Bredl Python (S'ven)~ 0.1 JJ x JCP (Trinity)~ 0.1 Albino Carpet Python (Akasha)~ 1.0 Olive Python (Nigel)~1.0 Scrub Python (Klauss)~ 1.0 BCI (Monty)~ 0.1 BCO (Xena)
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09-05-17, 02:53 AM
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#11
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Member
Join Date: Nov-2013
Posts: 560
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Re: pines are here
I was told even adult northern pines eat weekly but of course you have everything between extra careful growers and power feeders for opinions. One person I talked to was bragging they can get pits breeding the first year consistently and instead I'm thinking their future advice just went mostly on ignore.
The female finally ate gerbil again after calming down overnight with it. The male has only eaten that one small mouse fuzzy. I also had them at the higher end for temps and lowered the hot end 3f so maybe the female will be less temperamental, less energy into escaping, and not bury into the dirt all the time between.
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09-05-17, 07:08 AM
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#12
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Forum Moderator
Join Date: Dec-2002
Location: London
Posts: 3,332
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Re: pines are here
Anyone trying to breed these animals during their first year of life is not worth listening to.
If kept too hot, pits will not eat. Perhaps that may have something to do with it.
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09-05-17, 01:47 PM
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#13
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Member
Join Date: Nov-2013
Posts: 560
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Re: pines are here
The room is 68-70F with not the most expensively insulated sides so I didn't want too much drop on the cool side. They were on heat tape in a mostly empty rack of their siblings 1 week ago and don't seem to have this top heat, openings to shelter that blocks the top heat, and temperature gradient thing fully figured out yet so I think they were doing the opposite I was worried about and getting stuck on the hot end exposed to the che instead of outside the heat spread. Now I have it at maximum 80-81F.
It's hard to adjust towards building bioactive/natural setups when most info online and larger breeders is for paper lined or thin sterile substrate over bottom heat racks/bins or well insulated display cages in partially heated rooms. The pit group is a bit more knowledgeable in that area since more people like to setup enclosures that look like the outdoors they have seen the snakes come from, some really break the "rules" with multilevel enclosures holding pairs to up to 4 individuals, over some of the more exotic and tropical species concentrated groups/individuals I talk to but most research I find in searches instead of talking to people is still based on bottom heat rack and commercial display cages. Not many have written up species specific setup pages unless they are difficult to keep otherwise. I found someone breeding blue racers and have been learning the most by watching the racer keeping arguments that repeatedly occur between those defending how they can make a setup with everything required to keep the racers content and those saying they live constantly under stress for life.
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09-11-17, 03:06 AM
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#14
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Member
Join Date: Nov-2013
Posts: 560
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Re: pines are here
Well the male ate 2 rat pinkies and the female ate another 1and they are content in their hides with less escape attempts. The male was wandering today and the female yesterday while being proper hissy, tail rattling pits when disturbed so they seem to be doing fine now.
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09-11-17, 08:33 AM
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#15
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Forum Moderator
Join Date: Jun-2013
Location: ATL
Posts: 6,744
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Re: pines are here
Congrats on the successful feedings AK. They calm down pretty quickly especially once they get a few meals in them. My male was pretty defensive for the first month or so. He would hiss, strike, and rattle his tail a bit but after I stuffed his belly with a few rats we were good to go. I do miss hearing that hiss though. It's pretty cool and a little intimidating.
__________________
0.1 Albino Bull Snake (She-RA)~ 1.0 Snow Bull Snake (Apollo)~ 1.0 Coastal Carpet Python (Chomper)~ 1.0 JCP (Shredder)~ 1.0 Bredl Python (S'ven)~ 0.1 JJ x JCP (Trinity)~ 0.1 Albino Carpet Python (Akasha)~ 1.0 Olive Python (Nigel)~1.0 Scrub Python (Klauss)~ 1.0 BCI (Monty)~ 0.1 BCO (Xena)
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