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FeedersAny and all issues about raising rats, mice, or anything else that you feed your cornsnakes.
This is one of the smallest pinkies I've ever seen. The entire litter was tiny, most under a gram. The third pic is a comparison of the mini pinkie to an average small pinkie. These come in very handy for really small hatchlings and picky feeders. Just curious if anyone thinks there's a market for "mini" pinkies?
They would save me a lot of pinkie heads that I start tiny hogs on. I'd also say a lot of people who work with the lavender gene, eastern milks, etc. would be thrilled to buy reds.
They would save me a lot of pinkie heads that I start tiny hogs on.
That's for sure! It gets old cutting off the heads. I have lots of other snakes to eat the bodies, but still, not my favorite way to spend an afternoon.
Kathy
P.S. I wonder if the nutritional value is less in "reds". I've heard pinky mice referred to as diuretics, as they aren't much more than a water pill at that stage.
The parents were average size. There was around 15 in the litter. I pulled most for feeders but left 5 to grow out. I'm curious if this is a genetic or inheritable trait or just a fluke. A couple still borns were even smaller. I didn't weigh them but I'm guessing half a gram maybe. I thought the same thing about baby eastern and red milks. I wish I had these earlier this year when I hatched out 3 gram thayeri x corn hybrids.
I just got some the same size. The lady was reasonably new to breeding mice but had never seen them that small before. I could have used them at the beginning of hatching season. Now I will just throw them in when it's time for double pinks.
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