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Old 02-22-05, 09:26 PM   #1
cjice
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snake soap?

What can I use to wash my snake? Usually after a shed and a healthy "poop" he doesnt smell very good. What I am finding is that he will do his business during the night in his hide and lay in it. PEE-YOO. I usually just give him a warm bath but the smell is still on him. What would be safe to use?
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Old 02-22-05, 09:34 PM   #2
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Well, I used regular dish soap (just a few drops) in a rubbermaid to soak my Boas in to kill off mites, I don't know why you couldn;t do the same for your Ball.

I would definatly wait for confirmation from some of the more experienced people though.

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Old 02-22-05, 11:16 PM   #3
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just in case though, you might want to use baby shampoo, as your not trying to kill any mites.
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Old 02-22-05, 11:19 PM   #4
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Snakes' skin is unable to absorb odour, so if your snake smells after a good rinse and mild scrubbing under warm water, you have a problem. However, whenever I bathe my balls (hehe) I use a Nix and water solution of one squeeze of Nix to a sinkful of water. Why not the added benefit.
Shawn: in the Ball Python Breeding video, Colette Sutherland washes her females with a mild soap solution after they've laid eggs, so you should have no worries, just use a mild soap.
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Old 02-23-05, 12:49 AM   #5
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I took a rather smelly snake home once... I use Ivory dishsoap. I believe they make Dove dishsoap as well
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Old 02-23-05, 04:07 PM   #6
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I wouldn't have a clue as to what you can use to "wash" your snake, but about that mite though... I've heard of great success with olive oil.

Dishsoap? REALLY?? Funny. Last night I was just saying to my roommate how neat it was if my snake had a "pretty smell". LOL
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Old 02-23-05, 08:41 PM   #7
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Ok, I used tear-free baby shampoo and it did the trick...Apparently my snake does absorb odor cuz now he smells like "cherries jubilee"...lol
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Old 02-24-05, 05:45 PM   #8
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With a very minor background in chemistry and a heavier background in aquariums, I say the only thing that you should be using, if you're using soap, is glycerine, nothing else.

PEARS TRANSPARENT SOAP would be an excellent choice. It is just Glycerine and a little cedar and thyme for pleasant smell.

Dish soaps have numerous ingredients in them and also are extremely viscous which makes me worry that they might leave residue. Glycerine molecules stick to water very readily and the soap rinses super clean. It also doenst really absorb much moisture like normal milled soap does- not that this matters- you're washing keratin scales, but it can't hurt that its this gentle.

Shampoo is sodium laureth sulphate, in some concentration or another. I really don't think that's going to do much for you in the way of "washing" your snake. It very well might- I mean your hair and his scales are made from similar materials, but I would stick to the glycerine IMO- and I'd wash a snake in a designated rubbermaid/bowl. Not in my sink or tub. Safety first... Toothpaste residue, etc. You never know.

Oil=NOOOOO I tried this when I was 13, might have done it too many times in a row but I dried this pooor pythons skin RIGHT out. He actually shrivelled. His next shed SUCKED and he drank like a fish for a week.

Don't oil a snake unless you're killing mites or ticks or something...

Smell wise I suspect your smell is being caused more likely by a minor fungal or bacterial culture on the snake, rather than the snake itself being "dirty". What might work REALLY well is simply to wash the animal in very acidic water and suddenly make it obscenely alkaline- murdering any bacteria or fungus, and not even affecting the snake.

To do this, take some water, add about
1 ml of phosphoric acid to about 1 1/2 sinkfulls of water. This should put you about a Ph of 4 and change. Put the snake in that ofr about 20 seconds, then add a bunch of baking soda, about 10 heaped tablespoons. This will jack the Ph to over 9. Dont leave the snake in there for more than five minutes. If he acts uncomfortable ( I cant see why) remove him. This is guaranteed to kill any bacteria/fungus and solve your problem if they are the cause

(Get phosphoric acid as PH DOWN from a fish store, or as phosphoric acid from a head shop, hydroponics, or garden store)- $4-8 CDN for a huge bottle....
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Old 02-25-05, 10:31 AM   #9
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Quote:
Originally posted by pablo111
[...] PEARS TRANSPARENT SOAP would be an excellent choice. It is just Glycerine and a little cedar and thyme for pleasant smell. [...]
cedar is normally toxic to snakes.. doesn't sound like a good idea to me??

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Old 02-28-05, 10:12 PM   #10
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Touchee

didn't think of that... :S
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