Re: when can i see my snake is ready to bite
Either use a snake hook to support the neck, a few inches back from the head, and then use your other hand to reach under the snake and lift up. You can guide the head away from your hand. Keep this up until the snake recognizes what you're doing.
Sometimes I just use my other hand to distract the snake and then use the "free" hand to lift up the snake. This doesn't always work, and the snake hook might be necessary all the time, but my three Kings have never tried to bite. I had to use the two-hand method last night for my Yellow Rat--she was coiled a little and I couldn't be sure I was going to be tagged--but once I had my free hand under her, she was no problem once out of the tank.
Also, some snakes are enclosure defensive, but once they are out, they are easy to handle; however, some snakes remain that way for life, so you'll just have to get used to it if that happens.
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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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