| |
Notices |
Welcome to the sSnakeSs community. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.
|
01-02-17, 09:29 PM
|
#1
|
Member
Join Date: Nov-2013
Posts: 560
Country:
|
The difficulties of being a cat
|
|
|
01-02-17, 09:45 PM
|
#2
|
Member
Join Date: Oct-2016
Location: Madison, WI
Posts: 99
Country:
|
Re: The difficulties of being a cat
Haha...my cats were terrified the first time I brought a snake home. They were still curious so they were standing on their hind legs trying to see up into the tank, but if you made any sudden moves they would both fly into the air and bolt out of the room.
|
|
|
01-02-17, 09:55 PM
|
#3
|
Member
Join Date: Nov-2013
Posts: 560
Country:
|
Re: The difficulties of being a cat
Mine thinks the hungry rosy boa who wants to try tasting her paws is trying to play. We had to establish claws in mesh top = squirt bottle. The other critters have learned to ignore her. She did just remove my night viewing light from the top of the 29g because she couldn't see the snake well enough sitting on the metal bars holding the light above the mesh.
|
|
|
01-03-17, 10:11 AM
|
#4
|
Member
Join Date: Dec-2016
Location: AZ
Age: 51
Posts: 551
Country:
|
Re: The difficulties of being a cat
I have a cat that b*tch slapped my 7 foot boa, Fang. Fang remembers, and he will intimidate the cat and poster like he's going to slap him back, until the cat leaves. This same cat started antagonizing my baby tiger retic in front of her enclosure. She's about 5 feet now, and won't be so tiny anymore. I don't think the cat will ever learn, so the cat is often times removed from the room when the snakes come out to stretch and get cuddle time.
|
|
|
01-03-17, 10:18 AM
|
#5
|
Member
Join Date: Dec-2016
Posts: 715
Country:
|
Re: The difficulties of being a cat
Quote:
Originally Posted by GyGbeetle
...This same cat started antagonizing my baby tiger retic in front of her enclosure...
|
Your cat will learn... in a year or 3
|
|
|
01-03-17, 02:11 PM
|
#6
|
Member
Join Date: Nov-2013
Posts: 560
Country:
|
Re: The difficulties of being a cat
In 3 years it will be one less feeder to buy that month I keep telling mine we should not attempt to whap baby bullsnakes and blood pythons. If they get loose some day in a couple years it will not end well even if they aren't big enough to swallow the cat.
|
|
|
01-03-17, 02:53 PM
|
#7
|
Member
Join Date: Dec-2016
Location: AZ
Age: 51
Posts: 551
Country:
|
Re: The difficulties of being a cat
We have 2 tiger retics, 1 Burm, 1 Woma, and the rest (6) are Columbian red tails or some weird morph of those guys. So we basically have a bunch of large snakes. And Blossom, our female tiger retic, doesn't look happy when Meow Cat sashays in front of her enclosure. And now the cat is antagonizing our 3 baby boas. Poor kitty cat is going bye bye soon if he's not careful
|
|
|
01-03-17, 03:28 PM
|
#8
|
Member
Join Date: Dec-2016
Location: AZ
Age: 51
Posts: 551
Country:
|
Re: The difficulties of being a cat
There's Meow Cat and Fang, in the honeymoon phase of their relationship
|
|
|
01-03-17, 03:41 PM
|
#9
|
Member
Join Date: May-2012
Location: Belfast
Age: 60
Posts: 3,526
Country:
|
Re: The difficulties of being a cat
Why would you risk the life of your cat, just put it out of the room
__________________
I've gazed at the stars too fondly
To be afraid of the night
|
|
|
01-03-17, 03:53 PM
|
#10
|
Member
Join Date: Dec-2016
Location: AZ
Age: 51
Posts: 551
Country:
|
Re: The difficulties of being a cat
Quote:
Originally Posted by dave himself
Why would you risk the life of your cat, just put it out of the room
|
I think I approach it the same way others would approach allowing their young children or babies around snakes. If you understand your snake's temperament, then you know when it's becoming stressed. After said slapping incident, I will not allow my snake around the cat, because I can tell he gets stressed by this one particular cat. Similarly, if you have concerns for a child's safety around a particular snake, you wouldn't subject that child to that snake, correct? All their introductions were in a controlled environment (2 handlers, firm grip on snake, and an out for the animal), so I hardly define this as "risk(ing) the life of your cat"
|
|
|
01-03-17, 04:11 PM
|
#11
|
Member
Join Date: May-2012
Location: Belfast
Age: 60
Posts: 3,526
Country:
|
Re: The difficulties of being a cat
I don't let children under a certain age or my small dog anywhere near my snakes, but then that's just me . I wasn't attacking you honestly. But I've seen one of my own snakes who we had for over five year's at the time, and had never shown any sign of aggression, suddenly turn on me, I just wouldn't trust any of my snakes as far as I could throw them, which wouldn't be very far . This is only my opinion though and I'm no expert
__________________
I've gazed at the stars too fondly
To be afraid of the night
|
|
|
01-03-17, 04:35 PM
|
#12
|
Member
Join Date: Dec-2016
Location: AZ
Age: 51
Posts: 551
Country:
|
Re: The difficulties of being a cat
I will say, my husband has been bit by nearly every one of our snakes. Because of this, everything is closely supervised with 2 adults in the room at all times. And we don't let this one cat near them because it's just not worth the risk (to the snake. Cats all have claws and that's just a no for me). I know how you feel about them turning.
There is a very popular herp enthusiast that had a cat that was literally best friends with her snakes. It was amazing to see them interact. But it's not always the case, and we are cautious
|
|
|
01-03-17, 05:19 PM
|
#13
|
Member
Join Date: May-2012
Location: Belfast
Age: 60
Posts: 3,526
Country:
|
Re: The difficulties of being a cat
Thanks for not picking me up wrong and thinking I was attacking you . As I said I really am no expert and was jist voicing my concerns
__________________
I've gazed at the stars too fondly
To be afraid of the night
|
|
|
01-03-17, 05:30 PM
|
#14
|
Member
Join Date: Dec-2016
Posts: 715
Country:
|
Re: The difficulties of being a cat
I don't either let any of my other 18 animals get within biting, striking or scratching range of my snakes. Even if they wouldn't be able to kill each other because I'm right there, someone (likely the snake) could get seriously hurt. My cats have a seriously bad disposition around the snakes, as do most of the others because they are menu items. It's just not worth it.
On the other hand my 3.5 year old daughter can handle the snakes just fine and without issues, my almost 2 year old has some serious issues that snake eat mice and on feeding days she tends to run to mommy crying that the snake is hurting the mouse. Kind of cute, though
|
|
|
01-03-17, 08:03 PM
|
#15
|
Member
Join Date: Nov-2013
Posts: 560
Country:
|
Re: The difficulties of being a cat
My cat is never around when the snake is out or the tank lid she can be on level with is open but my cages are scattered through the house so she regularly reptile watches some and sees others when I go in that room. Her feet were moving so fast I couldn't get a pic of it but she was bopping the glass of the small tank while the inhabitants ignored her and she does it toward the rosy who stares back at her. If they were hiding, flinching, striking, or threatening at all, beyond the rosy tasting her paws through the mesh, I would not allow it but usually when I do worry something is bothering my reptiles they then turn around and show me they don't care. My desert king snake tank gets hit by the door sometimes and it has the loudest light system for the cats to land on top of. I kept getting concerned and trying to stop the dogs bumping it and keeping things quiet to encourage him to come out but then at the loudest, most active moment in the room he just came out, wandered around, laid in the open, drank some water, and burrowed again. He also has no problem eating while the dogs are wrestling and the cat is bopping the glass because his feeding rock is right in the front so I guess he doesn't actually care about the commotion and isn't hiding from it. He just picks random times that match when he feels like food, water, or temp change to come out. I see no real pattern to be concerned about or to encourage.
I am talking more about if a snake escapes which has already happened to us but it was the harmless dekayi and he stayed curled on top of his tank so he was found and slipped back in. I worry more about a defensive strike because of her desire to bop the snakes and then the cat responding with it's own weapons. Even a big snake that could eat the cat would probably suffer puncture wounds which reptiles can be more durable than mammals to such things but cat wounds have a high rate of infection. Then if you don't have a dead cat, first you might have to separate snake and cat and you should have seen the one time mine got stuck on some flypaper and shot off falling over and bashing into things. When it's all done you've got wounds on the cat to deal with too. They won't sit there waiting to get the angled teeth to release without breaking off or tearing skin like an experienced human will even if the snake doesn't do internal damage wrapping around the cat.
|
|
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 12:23 AM.
Powered by vBulletin® ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2002-2023, Hobby Solutions.
|
|