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05-24-16, 03:16 AM
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#1
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Member
Join Date: May-2016
Posts: 2
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Young Pine Snake Trouble feeding
Hey snake people,
I hope you guys can help me with feeding a young Pine Snake. The store I bought her from stated she was eating fuzzies once a week without problem but have had troubles from the start and I'm lucky for her to eat in 2 weeks.
TL;DR - Young pine snake won't eat in a timely fashion.
For a background, she is roughly 10 months old and have had her for about 5 months. She's roughly the width of a pencil and 1'6" in length. I have her in a a 10 gallon tank with wood shavings, temperatures from 90°C (plus or minus a few degrees) for basking and mid 70s on the cool side. She's handled almost daily and acts like a typical pine snake.
The first two months went alright with some issues but the last three months have been rough. I have her schedule from when trouble started. I forgot to document so I'll write estimated times.
Feb 17: 1 fuzzy
Feb 23: refused
Early March: 1 fuzzy
March 14: 1 fuzzy
March 21: refused
March 28: refused
April 10: 1 pinky, 1 fuzzy (took to the pinky and put a fuzzy in right after)
April 17: refused
Late April: refused
Early May: refused
May 11: 1 pinky
May 18: refused
May 24: refused
Around early March was when I tried different techniques to get her to eat. I would mostly cut a mouse open and rub its blood on a different mouse which she would take to sometimes. On April 10 I tried using a pinky to feed and she took to that which I train fed with a fuzzy right after. All attempts after were with both a pinky, a fuzzy, and then cutting the pinky and bloodying the fuzzy.
I've always fed her in a separate feeding tub usually in the evening. I'd usually have the lights on. Other techniques I've tried were:
- Warming mice under heat lamp: successful
- Warming mice in warm water: unsuccessful
- Scenting pinky onto fuzzy (rubbing each other): unsuccessful
- Feeding in with lights off: successful once
- Feeding with a heavy blanket covered (just a little light): 50/50 successful
- Left alone with a mouse: successful once
- Feeding in her tank itself: unsuccessful
At the moment I'm stuck. She's only shed twice since I've had her and I know these snakes get big fast. I'd say I'm a knowledgeable novice with reptiles and I have a young corn snake without any issues. I had an adult pine snake and didn't nearly have as many complications (but had some).
Any recommendations people?
Thanks!!
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05-25-16, 02:54 PM
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#2
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Forum Moderator
Join Date: Dec-2002
Location: London
Posts: 3,332
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Re: Young Pine Snake Trouble feeding
Try feeding in the enclosure and see how that goes.
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05-25-16, 03:00 PM
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#3
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Member
Join Date: May-2014
Location: Huntsville, AL
Posts: 1,042
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Re: Young Pine Snake Trouble feeding
I'm assuming those temps are actually Fahrenheit?
__________________
“...the old ones ... knew in their bones... that death exists, that all life kills to eat, that all lives end, that energy goes on. They knew that humans are participants, not spectators.” -- Stephen Bodio, On the Edge of the Wild
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05-25-16, 03:38 PM
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#4
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Forum Moderator
Join Date: Jun-2013
Location: ATL
Posts: 6,744
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Re: Young Pine Snake Trouble feeding
Pits are usually pretty aggresive at feeding time. I'd start by double checking your husbandry. Is your heat source controlled by a thermostat and how are you measuring the temps? Those analog thermometers can be somewhat inaccurate. 90F might also be a little too hot for your snake. My pits prefer cooler temps. My warm side doesn't get over 84-86F. Do you have hides on the hot and cool sides of the enclosure? Are you serving your prey items hot enough? I typically thaw my feeders inside a ziploc bag submerged in a bowl of warm water. When the feeder is completely thawed I use a blow dryer to heat it to about 100F. I also agree with the others that it's less stressful to feed the snake inside it's enclosure. If all else fails you could try a live prey item.
__________________
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05-25-16, 03:44 PM
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#5
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Forum Moderator
Join Date: Dec-2002
Location: London
Posts: 3,332
Country:
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Re: Young Pine Snake Trouble feeding
I now see in your post that you tried to feed in the enclosure, but has this been tried consistently Have you tried rat pinkies? Also I would really limit handling until shes on a good feeding schedule. Did you give her time to settle in before handling when you first got her? You may want to lower the hot spot by a few degrees as well.
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05-25-16, 05:41 PM
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#6
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Member
Join Date: Mar-2015
Posts: 3,317
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Re: Young Pine Snake Trouble feeding
Great looking pine snake btw!
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05-26-16, 12:41 AM
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#7
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Member
Join Date: May-2016
Posts: 2
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Re: Young Pine Snake Trouble feeding
Hey everyone!
Thanks for all of the replies, extremely helpful.
First, I derped pretty hard and yes those are Fahrenheit temps. I use a digital probe thermometer for my measurements.
She has a few hides on the warm and cool side which she frequents either side.
I gave her about two weeks before I fed her. I did handle her a few times in that period (I couldn't help myself).
I'm not sure what the temps of the mice are, fairly warm to touch. Like hot tea in a bottle for comparison.
With what you guys have told me, I think my plan of action will be to:
- Feed in her tank the next time (most likely with mouse pinkies at first)
- Use the heating method of warm water and a hair dryer
- Get an infrared thermometer
- Avoid handling
Should I continue to blood scent the mice? Or will an extra toasty mouse be enticing enough? Does it stress them out to have both a non bloody mouse and a bloody mouse to offer?
Do you guys feed in the dark or doesn't matter?
You guys are fantastic.
Cheers!
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