Re: rescue
good intentions but "it's too slow to catch food" is a big red flag that the snake is sick, or so malnourished that it may not make it.
So, I agree with what has been said. Before i really had a hard look at my keeping style, i took in snakes from the pound. In retrospect...i am not willing to risk my current snakes with *anything*. I am proud of my rescues, and i love them, and it was very rewarding to help them...but i shudder to think what could have happened had they actually had something more wrong with them than they did.
I did quarantine for about 6 months, but even that seems too short in retrospect.
Anyway, just be careful. If you feel you can have the little guy in a safe and quarantined environment from the others, then that is up to you and i hope he makes it!
I had separate spray bottles, tongs, poo cleaner-uppers (large spoon and tupperware LOL) even new bedding selections...all separate and i used hand sanitizer before and after any contact with anyone.
I should really still do that anyway. They're all in the same room now, though, but anything new ever brought in will get the same treatment!
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~Melissa~
27 snakes (7 sand boas, 4 hognose, 5 ball pythons, 1 bolivian boa, 2 dumeril's boas, 2 carpet pythons, 5 garters, 1 corn snake), 1 cave spider, 9 tarantulas, 1 tokay gecko, 2 dogs, 2 frogs, emperor scorpions 1,000 dubia roaches, & tons of fish.
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