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01-01-12, 11:30 AM
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#1
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Member
Join Date: Nov-2011
Location: Morehead City, NC
Age: 41
Posts: 240
Country:
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Feeding in your tank...
So I have only had my RTB for a few months and have established a fairly decent routine with her. How does everyone feel about feeding in the enclosure? I currently need to feed Athena in her enclosure due to the kids wanting to get too close. Aside from the possibility of impaction which I watch for pretty closely what other lagitimate down sides are there to this type of feeding? I don't believe that she will learn to strike everytime I open the cage door since I open it more often to handle her then to feed her, so that argument doesn't hold much ground to me. But is there actually other down falls?
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01-01-12, 11:52 AM
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#2
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Member
Join Date: Jun-2007
Location: Knoxville
Age: 56
Posts: 566
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Re: Feeding in your tank...
I feed in my tubs. I use Sani Chips. I dry the mice as best I can, but they do ingest some, and some gets caught in their teeth and they have to work to get it out - just as they would after eating in leaf litter and other types of environments they find themselves in out in the wild. Most of the chips, however, get scraped off as the mice pass through the mouth.
The reason I still feed in their enclosure? Because the guys at BHB do the exact same thing - feed on Sani Chips. And with THOUSANDS of healthy snakes and ZERO impaction, I don't worry.
BHB also did a semi-scientific test of feeding in and out of enclosures. They found no correlation between snakes biting and not biting.
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01-01-12, 11:55 AM
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#3
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slainte mhath
Join Date: Nov-2009
Location: kelty,fife
Age: 58
Posts: 8,509
Country:
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Re: Feeding in your tank...
Quote:
Originally Posted by Brently
So I have only had my RTB for a few months and have established a fairly decent routine with her. How does everyone feel about feeding in the enclosure? I currently need to feed Athena in her enclosure due to the kids wanting to get too close. Aside from the possibility of impaction which I watch for pretty closely what other lagitimate down sides are there to this type of feeding? I don't believe that she will learn to strike everytime I open the cage door since I open it more often to handle her then to feed her, so that argument doesn't hold much ground to me. But is there actually other down falls?
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i feed carpets pythons into double figures in their tanks.with no problems mate
i have never heard of any problems associated with feeding in their tanks
feeding in their own tanks is where i think the snake feels most secure
cheers shaun
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ALWAYS judge a person by the way they treat someone who can be of NO POSSIBLE USE TO THEM !
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01-01-12, 12:02 PM
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#4
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Forum Moderator
Join Date: Nov-2002
Location: Toronto
Age: 39
Posts: 16,977
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Re: Feeding in your tank...
I agree with all comments above.
I believe Shaun said it best that these animals feel most secure in their own enclosures.
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01-01-12, 12:16 PM
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#5
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Boa Lover
Join Date: Sep-2010
Location: Hereford
Age: 36
Posts: 2,618
Country:
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Re: Feeding in your tank...
I've tried feeding out of the viv in a feeding tub but found that my brb was to scared to eat, she'd rather sit in there staring at it. Now I feed in the viv and she never misses a feed.
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Cheers, Jamie.
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01-01-12, 12:43 PM
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#6
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Retired Moderator
Join Date: Sep-2011
Location: Miami
Posts: 8,469
Country:
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Re: Feeding in your tank...
We had a similar discussion not too long ago... Feeding tank or not?
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Alessia
Quote:
"Until one has loved an animal, a part of one's soul remains unawakened." -Anatole France
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01-01-12, 12:51 PM
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#7
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slainte mhath
Join Date: Nov-2009
Location: kelty,fife
Age: 58
Posts: 8,509
Country:
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Re: Feeding in your tank...
if you apply the SAME LOGIC to taking out the tank to feed,as you would for feeding in the tank,regards the biting theory
then surely everytime you took your snake out the tank,it would associate it with feeding and bite
alessia,the op has already said he don't think feeding in the tank makes them biters,he was asking about any percieved disadvatages other than that pal
cheers shaun
__________________
ALWAYS judge a person by the way they treat someone who can be of NO POSSIBLE USE TO THEM !
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01-01-12, 01:26 PM
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#8
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Member
Join Date: Jan-2011
Location: Colorado Springs
Age: 46
Posts: 924
Country:
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Re: Feeding in your tank...
I feed all our snakes in there enclosures. The pesky ones get taken out and isolated with the food. Our snakes seem to focus on the food item faster in there enclosure rather than taking them out and scaring them. There is no way I could feed the Lucies out of there enclosure, they are just way to defensively aggressive. I see it this way If Barchek can feed a huge berm in a tub I can do it with a cornsnake lol. Theres nothing wrong with feeding in the snakes enclosure.
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01-01-12, 05:10 PM
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#9
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Village Idiot
Join Date: Oct-2011
Age: 39
Posts: 7,360
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Re: Feeding in your tank...
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shmoges
I feed all our snakes in there enclosures. The pesky ones get taken out and isolated with the food. Our snakes seem to focus on the food item faster in there enclosure rather than taking them out and scaring them. There is no way I could feed the Lucies out of there enclosure, they are just way to defensively aggressive. I see it this way If Barchek can feed a huge berm in a tub I can do it with a cornsnake lol. Theres nothing wrong with feeding in the snakes enclosure.
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Can I get a link to this burm feeding?
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I used to be a nice guy but that don't get you anywhere. So now I'm just a piece of ****, idiot,
who's too stupid to care.
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01-01-12, 07:53 PM
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#10
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Member
Join Date: Jan-2011
Location: Colorado Springs
Age: 46
Posts: 924
Country:
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Re: Feeding in your tank...
Quote:
Originally Posted by KORBIN5895
Can I get a link to this burm feeding?
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Sure SnakeBytes TV - All Episodes
Start at the beginning and you will see many times they feed there huge monsters in there huge tubs.
I have seen him do it many times in many episodes I just can't pick which one lol, so if you haven't seen these grab a beverage and take a few hours and watch them all.
Brenty tell that lady the biggest mistake anyone could make is listening to petco employees. I can't say that its a mistake to get animals there though. Just yesterday I went to petco to get some krickets for our white lips and they had a bunch of decent sized dumpy tree frogs for $20 so I sayed hey how long have you had these "oh for awhile now", So i said, I will buy 4 if you can mark them down to $15. IT WORKED!!
Last edited by Shmoges; 01-01-12 at 08:00 PM..
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01-02-12, 10:11 AM
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#11
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Member
Join Date: Nov-2011
Location: Morehead City, NC
Age: 41
Posts: 240
Country:
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Re: Feeding in your tank...
I agree that most of their advice on actual species related topics is to be taken with some skeptisism. But I have found that they have been able to help me with technical issues with substrates and equipment for both the RTB and my fish. I to think that alot of their animals are very nice though. Better quality then what we have here at the LPS. I am afraid that they just don't keep good quality animals, probably not a fast enough turn over rate...
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01-01-12, 01:33 PM
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#12
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Snake Child
Join Date: Jun-2011
Location: New Hampshire
Age: 26
Posts: 2,431
Country:
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Re: Feeding in your tank...
I feed in the viv on plates/ flat hides.
Then again all my snakes are generally ready eaters.
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01-01-12, 01:57 PM
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#13
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Non Carborundum Illegitimi
Join Date: Mar-2010
Location: Keynsham
Age: 49
Posts: 9,556
Country:
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Re: Feeding in your tank...
I feed all seven of mine in their vivs - the little ones get an upturned hide to feed in and the larger ones get a plastic picnic plate to feed on - the two arboreal snakes just hang from their perch so i dont worry about them ingesting substrate.
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May you have more good days than bad
You never know how strong you are - until being strong is your only choice
There are no dark clouds - just well hidden silver linings!!
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01-01-12, 03:02 PM
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#14
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Member
Join Date: Jun-2007
Location: Knoxville
Age: 56
Posts: 566
Country:
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Re: Feeding in your tank...
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lankyrob
I feed all seven of mine in their vivs - the little ones get an upturned hide to feed in and the larger ones get a plastic picnic plate to feed on - the two arboreal snakes just hang from their perch so i dont worry about them ingesting substrate.
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Too bad all snakes can't eat hanging from a perch!
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01-01-12, 08:43 PM
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#15
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Member
Join Date: Feb-2011
Location: Toronto
Age: 33
Posts: 878
Country:
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Re: Feeding in your tank...
Quote:
Originally Posted by knox
Too bad all snakes can't eat hanging from a perch!
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Ill just leave this here...
http://a5.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphot..._5004113_n.jpg
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-Dan
The only thing that can stop you from your goal is yourself. -Myself...
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