Quote:
Originally Posted by Squirtle
If she eats for you in captivity, then I don't see a reason for releasing her. But man, is she beautiful!  I would take her off of your hands in a heart beat if you were in NYC. You just have to keep handling her until she feels that you're no longer a threat, and she will most likely stop biting. As for feeding, you're going to have to stun her prey really good, although they can still fight back.
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She blushed when I told her you said she was beautiful. haha
I thought the same thing when I saw her, so I decided to keep her.
How would you go about stunning a rat? Mice are stunned pretty easily by a flick to the head, but rats are more resilient. Seems that there's a fine line between stunned and dead with rats. Also, they seem to bleed more. I'd like to be as humane as possible when dealing with the rats. I breed my own and I treat them like pets up till the moment they're eaten.
Here are some recent pics of Esme. She's in her 3rd shed cycle in a under two months. Growing like a weed, she is. hashtagyoda
The night before her eye caps got foggy. I was misting her enclosure and she struck at me twice.
From this morning