| |
Notices |
Welcome to the sSnakeSs community. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.
|
05-03-15, 10:42 AM
|
#16
|
Member
Join Date: Oct-2013
Posts: 784
Country:
|
Re: Trying something new
Quote:
Originally Posted by MesoCorney
The thing I wonder about is if most snakes have evolved to eat whole rodents if feeding another food source may have negative consequences. Also the cost of these seem to be on par for my local mice supply, and more if I buy online. From the nutritional side of things they seem to have more fats than rats or mice. It doesn't say what types of fats these are but with most captive snakes being overweight I would be concerned about this. I am not sure that I could be convinced to try these as their natural prey is so readily available. Maybe as a snack to vary their diet.
|
I'm a bit skeptical of the venison ones(for snakes, anyway) for this reason. The rabbit ones should be fine though. I know a lot of people feed their (very large) snakes rabbits as a staple diet and they do great. The rabbit one isn't listed on the comparison chart though. I'd be interested to see how they compare to rats. But the chicken and venison varieties probably wouldn't hurt, even though I wouldn't feed them as a staple. A lot of people do feed chickens, goats, and pigs. Not sure how well those go as a staple, but I've heard of great results with varied diets.
__________________
0.1 tangerine albino honduran milksnake /// 0.1 snow southern pinesnake /// 0.1 black pinesnake /// 1.0 "hypo" north Mexican pinesnake (jani) /// 1.0 cincuate pinesnake (lineaticollis) /// 1.1 red striped gargoyle geckos /// 0.1 kitty cat /// 2.6.12 tarantulas(assorted species)
|
|
|
05-03-15, 12:00 PM
|
#17
|
Member
Join Date: Oct-2005
Location: Oklahoma
Age: 58
Posts: 1,714
|
Re: Trying something new
Snakes don't snack. Secondly, they have evolved as opportunist carnivores...rodents, birds, lizards, chipmunks, frogs....Further, it's a WHOLE ANIMAL product (as stated above and on their website)....so the fats are what they are: as fat as a deer or rabbit is, that's what you get.
|
|
|
05-03-15, 12:31 PM
|
#18
|
Member
Join Date: Dec-2014
Location: Denver
Posts: 839
Country:
|
Re: Trying something new
I meant snack as a treat, meaning feeding it in place of a normal mouse meal every now and again. I thought that was clear from me saying varying its diet, sorry. Besides very large snakes that live in tropical areas with very small deer, snakes in general do not opportunistically eat deer. So eating deer is not something that is relevant to me with my small north American snakes. In fact nor is eating rabbit really. If they were to come up with quail and lizard varieties then I might be more intrigued. The fact that the fat is what you get does not answer my concern. That was just my opinion, if you feel that they are beneficial to your snake then more power to you.
|
|
|
05-03-15, 03:20 PM
|
#19
|
Member
Join Date: Jan-2015
Location: St. Pete
Posts: 114
Country:
|
Re: Trying something new
Was reading this: Do Snakes Need Vitamins? | Animals - PawNation and it would seem snakes do benefit from the stomach contents of their prey. Not sure if this info is reliable or how important stomach contents are to a snake's nutrition. Maybe we can add vitamin supplements in the sausages?
__________________
by my lights
|
|
|
05-03-15, 04:54 PM
|
#20
|
Member
Join Date: Oct-2005
Location: Oklahoma
Age: 58
Posts: 1,714
|
Re: Trying something new
Just a wild thought.....go to website...click "contact us", type your in your questions, send to Nick. Await the response. Repeat as needed.
|
|
|
05-03-15, 05:12 PM
|
#21
|
Member
Join Date: Oct-2013
Posts: 784
Country:
|
Re: Trying something new
Quote:
Originally Posted by Eggplant
Was reading this: Do Snakes Need Vitamins? | Animals - PawNation and it would seem snakes do benefit from the stomach contents of their prey. Not sure if this info is reliable or how important stomach contents are to a snake's nutrition. Maybe we can add vitamin supplements in the sausages?
|
I wouldn't recommend it, since we don't know what synthetic vitamins are actually bioavailable to snakes nor which ones we would be losing when stomach contents are removed. Besides which, stomach contents of prey can vary considerably so it's hard to say how significant that portion is. A better way to solve this potential problem would be to include the stomach contents(ie. throw a whole, unaltered rabbit or rat through the meatgrinder without any preparation beforehand besides pre-killing it)
__________________
0.1 tangerine albino honduran milksnake /// 0.1 snow southern pinesnake /// 0.1 black pinesnake /// 1.0 "hypo" north Mexican pinesnake (jani) /// 1.0 cincuate pinesnake (lineaticollis) /// 1.1 red striped gargoyle geckos /// 0.1 kitty cat /// 2.6.12 tarantulas(assorted species)
|
|
|
05-03-15, 07:02 PM
|
#22
|
Member
Join Date: Oct-2005
Location: Oklahoma
Age: 58
Posts: 1,714
|
Re: Trying something new
oh....and, eggplant, i am not busting on you, you may be on to something, idk...but, in no way, shape, or form could I take anything from a source called "pawnation" as a reputable, blinded study, peer-reviewed source anymore than i could take any medical advice form dr. oz.
the statement may be true. however, the amount research that Nick appears to have done in bioassays, growth rates and the like, would tend to give me more assurance than a care sheet from pawnation......
|
|
|
05-03-15, 07:37 PM
|
#23
|
Member
Join Date: Jan-2015
Location: St. Pete
Posts: 114
Country:
|
Re: Trying something new
Quote:
Originally Posted by MDT
oh....and, eggplant, i am not busting on you, you may be on to something, idk...but, in no way, shape, or form could I take anything from a source called "pawnation" as a reputable, blinded study, peer-reviewed source anymore than i could take any medical advice form dr. oz.
the statement may be true. however, the amount research that Nick appears to have done in bioassays, growth rates and the like, would tend to give me more assurance than a care sheet from pawnation......
|
Hi Yeah, info online is often not very trustworthy. I did send a email inquiring about stomach contents, nutrition and what not to the Reptilinks peeps earlier. They replied saying basically, they only took out organs that has a lot of poop in them. They're still investigating the impact of removing poops in regard to protobiotic content currently, but the reptiles they've been feeding only sausages to for the past 5 (!) years are healthier and produce larger clutches than when on rodents! I think that's pretty awesome.
__________________
by my lights
|
|
|
05-03-15, 08:41 PM
|
#24
|
Forum Moderator
Join Date: Sep-2011
Location: Overhill and underhill.
Posts: 7,365
Country:
|
Re: Trying something new
MDT, I commented on that thread in Morelia pics of the day, nice to know I'm not the only one in that group! I'm ok with you posting the link. I just wish he made them big enough for larger species, if he did I would definitely try them.
|
|
|
05-03-15, 09:38 PM
|
#25
|
Member
Join Date: Oct-2005
Location: Oklahoma
Age: 58
Posts: 1,714
|
Re: Trying something new
kyle...no doubt. if they work out in terms of better utilization of available nutrients, i'm all in...i know i could sustain my carpets well on them...my retics will eventually hit a size where i'm gonna need to figure something else out. but for now, we're good!
|
|
|
05-03-15, 09:45 PM
|
#26
|
Forum Moderator
Join Date: Sep-2011
Location: Overhill and underhill.
Posts: 7,365
Country:
|
Re: Trying something new
Totally. Not knocking them or anything, but they're just not worth the cost either. $4 each for the 100g weight ones? No thanks. That's just too much. Although I suppose it's cheaper than buying ratcicles individually at the pet store if you can't keep rodents in the freezer... I definitely see the uses, just not right for me.
|
|
|
05-03-15, 09:52 PM
|
#27
|
Forum Moderator
Join Date: Nov-2002
Location: Toronto
Age: 39
Posts: 16,977
|
Re: Trying something new
4 bucks?! My medium rats at 150 grams are half that cost. I don't see the benefit over rats since it's whole prey as well.
|
|
|
05-03-15, 09:59 PM
|
#28
|
Member
Join Date: Oct-2005
Location: Oklahoma
Age: 58
Posts: 1,714
|
Re: Trying something new
higher calorie than whole rat, less "packaging" (so-to-speak)...being more calorie dense, you don't have to feed at the same frequency, and pretty much the whole package is bio-available, so waste is decreased (i.e. better utilization of the food, don't have to waste energy pooping out bones, fur, etc...)...
idk....i'm anxious to see how my "trial" goes...
|
|
|
05-03-15, 10:25 PM
|
#29
|
Forum Moderator
Join Date: Sep-2011
Location: Overhill and underhill.
Posts: 7,365
Country:
|
Re: Trying something new
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aaron_S
4 bucks?! My medium rats at 150 grams are half that cost. I don't see the benefit over rats since it's whole prey as well.
|
The way I see it, they're great if you have someone that doesn't want dead rats in the freezer, but you don't wan to go buy rats at the pet store each week that are way overpriced.
|
|
|
05-04-15, 09:04 AM
|
#30
|
Member
Join Date: Oct-2013
Posts: 784
Country:
|
Re: Trying something new
Stuff like this could really help to expand the reptile hobby, since squeamishness about dead rodents is often a bigger turn-off for people than the snakes themselves. I'm interested to see whether this will catch on. I imagine some snakes might be difficult to switch over to sausages. The fruit and veggie ones would probably make a great staple for tegus, though, and would eliminate the daily chore of preparing complicated meals as well as getting picky eaters to consumer a complete diet! (Or mostly complete; not sure if they might need to be supplemented a bit with other foods)
Personally I would stick with mice for my snakes, for the sake of convenience mostly(it seems the cost would balance out, considering the calorie content of the sausages), but if these ever came to Canada I would certainly suggest them to squeamish friends who have interest in snakes. Perhaps they could be considered for vacation food to make things easier on repti-sitters, but it depends on how willing snakes would be to make the switch.
__________________
0.1 tangerine albino honduran milksnake /// 0.1 snow southern pinesnake /// 0.1 black pinesnake /// 1.0 "hypo" north Mexican pinesnake (jani) /// 1.0 cincuate pinesnake (lineaticollis) /// 1.1 red striped gargoyle geckos /// 0.1 kitty cat /// 2.6.12 tarantulas(assorted species)
|
|
|
Thread Tools |
|
Display Modes |
Linear Mode
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 02:36 PM.
Powered by vBulletin® ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2002-2023, Hobby Solutions.
|
|