Autumn knows her ball pythons!!
My experience with balls has been pretty negative, and it has put me off from ever delving into the ball python world more expansively. I have Ramesses, my very handsome normal boy, and he is such a pain. When I first got him, he had been a picky eater, the breeder had to force feed him for 6 months, but he finally started taking food on his own. At this point I was feeding all my snakes live (under the false impression it was better!) well, he lived in a 12 quart sterilite in a nice dark place (cough cough, hiding in my dorm room), and was a fantastic eater. After I got bit on the hand by one of the mice I was feeding him, I switched him to prekilled, then F/T which was super easy for him, I was lucky. Well when it came time to move him to a larger enclosure, he completely stopped eating. The cage was probably too large, but he is a big snake and I thought I was doing a good thing. He had lots of cover, his temps and humidity were all correct, and then he began to plummet down hill.
Though the husbandry was good, he stopped eating. I tried everything, rats, mice, and ASF. His sheds began to fall off by the piece rather than one long shed, and the scariest thing of all (which I think was actually a substrate allergy) is that the scales on his stomach would crack and flake off. He had been on cypress mulch.
Well. Against my own wishes I ended up buying him a boaphile rack (off craigslist thank goodness). I got him switched into the tubs in it, and put him on aspen shavings. His next shed came off in two pieces and his stomach began to heal. The next shed was one nice piece, and I literally cried because it had been over a year since he had a good shed. Within 3 months of getting him into the rack he began to eat again. He had not eaten anything at all in 6 months by that time, and I knew of another ball my friend had that went off feed for 8 every year, so I thought maybe he just had "other things" on his mind. That kinda all fell apart this year though, he ate all fall and right up into mid December. He refused food twice this year and is back to eating.
Any way. I guess my point is- anything can make a ball python turn finicky. Of course each one is an individual, but my experience has completely turned me away. I may one day add one or two when I have more patience because I really like pieds, but over all- I never want to deal with this again.