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Old 11-14-13, 11:22 AM   #16
CK SandBoas
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Re: Albino Sand Boa still not eating. AARGH

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Originally Posted by formica View Post
why take my question as some kind of personal attack and then just be rude? I was asking due to the fact that I intend on keeping sand boa's next year, and thought it was a reasonable question to ask, given that I have a stack of glass enclosures which I no longer use, for the reasons I alluded to in my previous post.
Glass enclosures can be used, with the proper modifications. I've been keeping my adult fenales in them, along a couple of my smaller adult males. The tops are covered with lexan, cut specifically to fit the tops. To say that they cannot be used or are not proper setups for Sand Boas, when you don't even keep the species, is all hearsay. I apologize for my rudeness, but when the setup that the OP has will work, I just don't see the need to change it. As ive said, it may just be that his sand boa is sexually mature, and looking to breed.

4 weeks is nothing to be concerned about, as long as the sand boa is maintaining a healthy weight. When the Sand Boa is hungry, he'll eat. Keep an eye out for his head above the surface of the aspen, that usually means he's looking for food.


And again, to Formica, I apologize for my rudeness
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Old 11-14-13, 11:39 AM   #17
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Re: Albino Sand Boa still not eating. AARGH

ho wmuch humidity should they have?
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Old 11-14-13, 12:17 PM   #18
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Re: Albino Sand Boa still not eating. AARGH

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ho wmuch humidity should they have?
60 percent humidity allows for mine to have perfect sheds...I usually keep a humid hide filled with moist spaghnum moss on the hot spot to achieve this..
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Old 11-14-13, 12:48 PM   #19
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Re: Albino Sand Boa still not eating. AARGH

ok cool.. they will probably have custom enclosures eventually as i like building my enclosure and i've been looking into purchasing some plastic ones too. like the boaphiles but not as big.
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Old 11-17-13, 12:06 PM   #20
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Re: Albino Sand Boa still not eating. AARGH

Thank you CK, Formica, MizCandice, and Wrecker for reading my posts and the feedback. I've followed advice that seemed to be substantiated by other members/research and may still act on more of the advice in the near future (ie: thermostatically controlled heat mat and light; thermostat probe under heat lamp; live mice; weighing with digital scale). here is an update:

11/14 Wrapped all 4 walls with black paper to block about 95% of all ambient light.
11/15 removed white incandescent bulb. replaced with red bulb. Bulb is on about 12 hours/day. off at night. temp varies from 80 on cool side to 100 on hot side. He seems to prefer the middle of tank or cooler side of tank.
11/17 Concerned that his shedding has progressed. placed his whole body in warm water about 1/2" deep. he stayed in it for about 3 minutes. May have been swallowing it. Do they actually drink water? I guess I've never seen them do that in pictures or on tv so it seems odd. I"m waiting for the shedding to stop before attempting another feeding. We've limited our digging him up to about every other day just to look at him and see if he is still alive. He moves very slowly the few times I've picked him up. He moves a little faster after I've held him for a minute. I took the picks of his wrinkles/shedding, put him in the water bowl, and put him back in tank. he crawled back under the bedding.

Thanks for reading. DOES HIS SHEDDING PICTURE SEEM NORMAL/ACCEPTABLE (he started peeling about 6 days ago)?
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Old 11-17-13, 12:10 PM   #21
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Re: Albino Sand Boa still not eating. AARGH

no the shedding doesn't look normal.. hes is deff having a rough shed.. what is the humidity at in your tank? it should be around 50% i believe personally i'd try to bump it up a little higher during shedding.
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Old 11-17-13, 12:14 PM   #22
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Re: Albino Sand Boa still not eating. AARGH

Quote:
Originally Posted by Journeyman View Post
Thank you CK, Formica, MizCandice, and Wrecker for reading my posts and the feedback. I've followed advice that seemed to be substantiated by other members/research and may still act on more of the advice in the near future (ie: thermostatically controlled heat mat and light; thermostat probe under heat lamp; live mice; weighing with digital scale). here is an update:

11/14 Wrapped all 4 walls with black paper to block about 95% of all ambient light.
11/15 removed white incandescent bulb. replaced with red bulb. Bulb is on about 12 hours/day. off at night. temp varies from 80 on cool side to 100 on hot side. He seems to prefer the middle of tank or cooler side of tank.
11/17 Concerned that his shedding has progressed. placed his whole body in warm water about 1/2" deep. he stayed in it for about 3 minutes. May have been swallowing it. Do they actually drink water? I guess I've never seen them do that in pictures or on tv so it seems odd. I"m waiting for the shedding to stop before attempting another feeding. We've limited our digging him up to about every other day just to look at him and see if he is still alive. He moves very slowly the few times I've picked him up. He moves a little faster after I've held him for a minute. I took the picks of his wrinkles/shedding, put him in the water bowl, and put him back in tank. he crawled back under the bedding.

Thanks for reading. DOES HIS SHEDDING PICTURE SEEM NORMAL/ACCEPTABLE (he started peeling about 6 days ago)?
He definitely should have finished shedding by now. you are going to want to either place him in a deli cup with either damp paper towels or damp spaghnum moss, and leave him in it, or maybe it's even better to assist the shed off with a wet q-tip. You are going to want to get that shed off sooner rather than later, considering the amount of time it's been. If you use the q-tip method, make sure you have a bowl of warm water as well, to keep wetting the q-tip with. Gently rub off the shed with the q-tip, working from the head, down to the tail. Make sure you also work around the body, meaning go around the diameter of the body as you help the shed come off.
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