Re: Milk snake shed?
Looks more like a northern Mexican species to me, not Honduran/Central American. Maybe a Mexican milk which also ranges into So. U.S. a bit. But then, a lot of milks in the pet trade are crosses of similar subspecies so there's no telling what it is exactly except that the pattern suggests a northern Mexico species rather than So. Mexico/Central American.
Going by a care sheet for Pueblan milk snake should be fine.
You'll know a snake is going to shed soon because they get dull colored, eyes may get milky/grey looking for a few days to two weeks. Then one day the eyes suddenly clear up. After the eyes clear the snake should shed within a few days. A young snake will shed pretty often (perhaps every 4-6 weeks) if it's healthy and growing well. Adults grow more slowly, and so shed less frequently. And yes, it's perfectly normal for any snake in opaque phase (milky eyes) to be nervous / defensive / biting because they usually can't see well. Best to leave them alone during that time until they shed. Overheating milks/kings often causes an otherwise docile snake to get mean and bite too. Be sure you're not overheating. Your snake should be able to have a place to go that isn't warmer than upper 70's. Snakes sometimes seek out cooler moist places when they are about to shed. If it's too hot and dry he will definitely be grouchy and might have trouble shedding.
You should place your hand near the snake from the side and make sure he's aware of you, then lift from underneath. Predators grab from above and so doing that can make them bite/get defensive.
Last edited by concinnusman; 02-11-13 at 05:16 PM..
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