VickyChaiTea said:
So you're telling me that there is such a small risk of your snake DYING that it's ok to feed live? I really don't think there is enough evidence out there to say what the actual statistics are on how likely it is that your snake is going to be injured, but I personally CARE about my animals, and choose to NOT risk their health or well being.
That's right. Have you ever compared a Ball Python that feed's on f/t, side by side, with one that feeds on live? Have you ever felt how differently they feel towards build, their fitness, and their activity? I care about my animals as well, which is why I continue to feed live. Do you really believe I'd risk the lives of any of my animals, if I had ever thought a threat was posed?.... I don't think so. Especially when investing in an animal that could cost me mine, and my families home, if it died.
Like I've said. 13 years, and god knows how many animals produced total, including what I've hatched, and no injuries. That's not coincidental.
As for you feeding frozen thawed, that is your preference, your opinion, and your choice. Nothing more.
VickyChaiTea said:
It is NOT as dangerous to feed frozen/thawed. A dead mouse CANNOT kill a snake. A dead mouse CANNOT bite or scratch a snake. Frozen/thawed mice have virtually no parasites, bacteria, or other pathogens in them that could hurt a snake. The worst that can happen is the snake eats a piece of bedding (and this only applies if you feed inside the viv) and either a) digests it no problem or b) needs to have it removed by a vet. That is the only real threat that is unique to feeding frozen/thawed. Now lets look at the threats presented by feeding live. Death, scratches, bites, gouged out eyes, injured mouth possibly causing starvation, infections, parasites, bacteria, and a plethora of other injuries. Now you tell me which is safer.
Now show me actual statistics, images, so forth on gouged eyes in Ball Pythons, and other extreme events of damage caused by a properly sized live prey item.
How much has been studied on thiamine break down, amino acid break down, protein break down, etc, of the actual prey item during the freezing process? When it comes to nutrition, you won't see that in live prey, unless feeding emaciated, unhealthy prey. show me how many people have had any type of parasital infections in their Ball Pythons due to feeding live. Bacteria. Etc. I'm very interested...
VickyChaiTea said:
So you're telling me that ball pythons always kill their prey in 5-10 seconds? It never takes any longer than that? What about all the pinkies that get eaten alive, hm? You're telling me that doesn't happen? Even if they DO die in 5 seconds, those are 5 excruciating seconds. Terrifying seconds.
That's right, 5 to
15 seconds. Show me how many Ball's have grabbed 'pinkies' and swallowed them live. Personally, I don't know of a single person that feeds their Ball Pythons pinky anything. They come out of the egg large enough to take fuzzy rats, right off the bat. I've hatched I don't know how many Pythons in general, not including Balls. Burmese Pythons, African Rock Pythons, Ringed Pythons, Red Blood Pythons, etc. Do you know how many swallowed their prey alive? 0.
Like I've said, dying is dying. At the end of the day, those rodents were bred for one thing. To feed predators.
VickyChaiTea said:
And excuse me pain by CO2 euthanasia? You do realize that they worst they feel is discomfort before passing out, right? At worst, they get scared, pass out, and die. That is NOT comparable to being squeezed to death while your ribs crack, organs burst, you involuntarily and piss yourself and try to scream in terror.
Terror? By the time they know what hit them, and have the time to yelp, they're out of it and gone. They might have enough time for a leg to twitch or kick. That's more or less involuntary neurological twitching. Have you ever x-rayed or cat scanned a Rat after the animal had constricted it, and proven that organs had burst, ribs had cracked/broken, or any other 'horror' filled episode? The simple thing is they don't. As for defecation/urination during death... have you ever seen the bottom of a CO2 chamber, after it's been used?
As for discomfort, pain is simply another form. They do feel certain amounts of 'pain' during the gassing process. It's like choosing a quick death or drowning. Drowning is painless. At the same time, drowning would be one of the most excruciating death's anyone could experience.
These animals are built to kill their prey as quickly and efficiently as possible. They don't want their prey to struggle. They don't want to have to take minutes to kill prey. They're built to put them out, and put them out quickly. Any struggle, 'screaming', or any other part of the argument you have not only would cause them to expend more energy than they'd rather like to in the wild (possibly life or death), yet that prey 'screaming', or making noise makes them a target for other predators higher up on the food chain.
VickyChaiTea said:
"The fact that it boils down to is dying sucks, and regardless of how much it sucks, the rats die in order to feed our snakes. " by that logic you condone skinning dogs alive. Death sucks, right? And what if someone wanted to eat a dog? Why not just skin it alive and start butchering it right there? Why bother killing it? I mean it dies anyway so who cares?
Immature attempt at best. Now where do you see me say skinning a dog is anything to rant or rave about? I said dying sucks. These animals are bred to feed our animals, and as much as you'd like to bicker about what
you feel is a worse death, they still die to feed our animals. There's no great thing about dying.
Now skinning on the other hand is torture. If you really want to compare skinning to death by a predator built to kill you as quickly and painlessly as possible, you're nuts. There's no other way about it.