Carol, umbilicus or intestine?
I'm specifically asking this question of Carol (because I've read a couple of her posts concerning this issue), but I'd appreciate answers from any experienced breeders.
Sometime in the middle of the night last night, the one remaining egg pipped (all the other 11 eggs in this particular clutch pipped yesterday, and all had crawled from their eggs by 10 a.m. this morning with no problems). I checked the last pipped egg at 11:15 this morning, and she apparently had just left the egg a bit too early (I'm assuming too early, from the very thin, pale pink cord that trailed about an inch or two behind her, with some clear, gooey wet stuff at the end, not yellow yolk). Carol, in the past, you've recommended snipping an umbilical cord off, up close to the hatchling's belly, so that the snake would not accidentally end up pulling out its intestines if the cord caught on something. So, that's what I did, since I assumed it was an umbilical cord.
Now, I'm frantically second-guessing myself, only because I realized immediately post-snip that I don't know what an amel hatchling's intestine looks like (AND, naturally, she's the best of the 12 -- a real keeper!). How do I know if I did indeed snip an umbilical cord and not an intestine itself? The pale thin cord had a red vein in it, from which dripped a couple of small drops of blood, and then closed up. The snake now has a tiny pale pink stub (located about an inch above her cloaca), and she's crawling around her plastic tub quite alertly, checking things out. She's every bit as active and strong as her clutchmates. No bleeding or oozing or anything.
What would an intestine have looked like, as opposed to the umbilical cord?
I'm sure other egg watchers will appreciate your answer, since this "dragging something behind it" situation appears to happen somewhat often (although it's a first for me).
SnakeNutt
Liz
|