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Old 04-19-03, 05:02 PM   #1
sunset
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Help with garter please

I am taking care of my little brothers garter snake (he's 9, and parents have joint custody, so he's not home enough to take care of it, blah blah) and it has been eating goldfish, and I REALLY want to convert it to mice, or anything better than goldies. I tried dripping fish 'juice" on a pinky mouse, and he showed no interest whatsoever. I tried thawed out smelt pieces, and he picked it up as if to eat it, and then dropped it. I even put a few pieces of it in the bowl with a few goldfish, to get him in 'eating mode', and he did the same thing. Any ideas?
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Old 04-19-03, 05:19 PM   #2
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well u could atleast get him on a fish that is a little more healthy like platties or minnows. Maybe u could try that and the go to frozen fish...don't really know about converting but try to get him on the above fish.
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Old 04-19-03, 06:59 PM   #3
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Garters don't eat mice. hth.
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Old 04-19-03, 08:17 PM   #4
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Ya, garter snakes eat fish...and, I think, also small lizards and frogs...
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Old 04-19-03, 08:25 PM   #5
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Garters do eat mice Froglet, ask one of the many people who has a garter that eats mice.
hth,
Adam

ps. Sunset, I don't know what kind of garter you have but maybe try earthworms.
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Old 04-19-03, 10:26 PM   #6
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Mice are not the proper diet for garter snakes, and switching a non-rodent eating snake to a rodent diet can cause problems with the snake's health. Their systems were not made to digest rodents, they were made to digest fish, worms, and some eat crickets as well. I would recommend that you just keep feeding the fish, but go to a more nutritious type as suggested above.

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Old 04-19-03, 10:34 PM   #7
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Adam, do your garters eat snakes? If so, how long and how is their health?

I apologize, I should have included "naturally" or "in the wild" or something.

Thanks for the intelligent additions BurmBaroness.
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Old 04-19-03, 10:54 PM   #8
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This is a diet which I have used over the years.

Fish (goldfish, platys, guppies, etc)
Worms (big fat earthworms, and such)
and they will eat pinkie mice.

It is better to vary the diet and not to feed too many pinkie mice. I always fed my garters fish and worms and once a month I would toss in a pinkie.

But a strict diet of just pinkies is not recommended. Garter snakes digestive system is not geared to handle a strict diet of pinkies. But I you want to feed one a month, make sure you wake some extra time before feeding again as it takes longer to digest the pinkie than it does a fish.
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Old 04-19-03, 11:46 PM   #9
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Quote:
Originally posted by BurmBaroness
Mice are not the proper diet for garter snakes, and switching a non-rodent eating snake to a rodent diet can cause problems with the snake's health. Their systems were not made to digest rodents, they were made to digest fish, worms, and some eat crickets as well. I would recommend that you just keep feeding the fish, but go to a more nutritious type as suggested above.
I'm afraid I couldn't disagree more strongly. Most Thamnophis species are opportunistic feeders whose natural diets include rodents, birds, amphibians, fish, carrion, and invertebrates. They digest mice extremely well and tend to live longer and healthier lives on a rodent diet than a fish only diet. Higher quality calcium in the rodents is one suspected reason, as is a greater variety of amino acids and minerals in the rodent diet. There is also a greatly reduced chance of parasites. Garters on a fish diet are usually riddled with flukes which can easily penetrate the lung and cause respiratory disease.

I've worked with rescued garter snakes since 1978 and far more snakes have taken to rodents than crickets in my experience. I've had maybe 5 or 6 in that whole time period who've readily accepted crickets. There has only been 1 species that I've not been able to get to take rodents, the western ribbon.

If the garter has had nothing but goldfish for an extended period conversion can be very slow. Try doling out just one fish at a time into the water bowl, and after 2 or 3 goldfish throw in a goldfish-scented platy or minnow. Once you've got the snake accepting different types of fish, try throwing in a frozen/thawed pinkie well scented with goldfish. I keep a goldfish carcass in a baggie in my freezer that I can use over and over for scenting. I find it works better than a live fish as garters will often choose a several days dead fish over a living one in the wild.

Even with such a powerful scent, though, the conversion process can be slow for an adult snake.
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Old 04-20-03, 11:05 AM   #10
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I fully agree with eyespy. I would add that a mouse diet is way better than a fish diet for garters. Fish is loaded with parasites and can lead to all sorts of problems for your snake. In my collection, the only snakes that have had chronic health problems or that have died were either exclusive live fish eaters or had had fish in their diet at some point in time.

On top of eyespy's suggestion, I would also try feeding your snake earthworms (as somebody mentioned). Since it's been used to eating moving prey, it might react to the worm moving around. If it doesn't go for it, you can try to rub the worm against a live or dead fish (whatever your snake is used to eating at the time you try).

For more information on garters and diet, a good site to visit is:
http://www.mcwetboy.com/gartercare/

If you need any more help, please let us know.

And good luck.
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Old 04-20-03, 11:34 AM   #11
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Froglet, my garter snake does not eat snakes, but it does eat mice (I know thats what you meant to say). He has been eating them for a few months and I notice a rapid growth increase even after one pinky. I also feed him earthworms and guppies. Unfortunetaly he escaped and I hope I'll be able to find him
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Old 04-20-03, 09:52 PM   #12
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It has been said by some "experienced" keepers, such as Dr. Alan Francis, that a diet based mostly on "oily" fish is not suitable for Garters who have some predisposition to thiamine deficiency. Those fish lack vitamin B1 and contain an enzyme called thiaminase which is believed to destroy thiamine. It is suspected that this has in fact led to the deaths of some garter snakes. Some fish to watch for are; whitebait, mackerel, spratt and herring. Just something to think about....

I have gotten garters to thrive (survive and reproduce) with a diet of almost exclusively frogs (from the appropriate locale) and bait worms with the occasional mouse thrown in. If you choose to feed your garter worms, make sure they are NOT worms which have a red stripe on them that you may find at some bait shops. These worms are toxic to your snakes.

Overall, I'd recommend you try a diet rich in variety. Garters are one of a few snakes who will accept such a wide variety of food, so why limit their food items to just one thing, be it worms, fish or mice.

Good luck! Here are some links to a few good care sheets...
http://www.gartersnake.co.uk/
http://www.thamnophis.com/artic22.htm
http://www.anapsid.org/gartcare.html
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Old 04-21-03, 07:33 AM   #13
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If available, I find canned salmon to be a great food for switching diets. They seem to love the taste and the odor, and there's always some skin in the can you can save for scenting other food items. There's no thiaminase in salmon so it's safe that way, but you do need to offer either calcium-rich foods or use a light dusting of a supplement.

It only works if your snake will take non-moving food items. Most do it readily but once in awhile you'll find a snake that's stuck on motion.

I just throw little chunks of the salmon in their water dish and most go nuts.
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Old 04-21-03, 07:42 AM   #14
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I avoid a frog diet whenever possible, the parasite load is far higher than even feeder goldfish, and the strains of parasite are more likely to thrive in a snake.

If I absolutely have a stubborn frog-eating garter I use only tadpoles that I've bred myself and treated with Flagyll and Droncit.
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Old 04-21-03, 09:26 AM   #15
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When I had a garter, I fed her on mostly minnows and earthworms... basically things avalible at the local bait shop... She seemed to do very well on that..
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