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Water

Never warmed the water to room temp

Well, it probably gets there before they drink any, anyway. But refrigerators will get the water WAY too cold for snakes. Warmth-loving reptiles don't need to be drinking water that is around the temperature that will kill them. You'd never feed them a 3 degree (Celsius) mouse. But it's sort of a moot point, I'm sure very little if any is drank while it is that cold.
 
Maybe a bit over the top not to cause arguments but what happens in the wild a lot of streams rivers ect are going to be around those temps


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I grew up in corn snake country. In the winter, sure, stream water will get near freezing, but the snakes are all underground then. I could always swim in the water of piedmont to coastal NC when it was snake season -it wasn't nearly that cold. But like I said, it's probably not going to matter, the odds of the snake going right to the bowl and drinking in the first 10 minutes you put fresh water in there is unlikely. It's just an unnecessary step, that probably wouldn't be appreciated if they had to drink it that cold. Fortunately, in a matter of minutes, a small container will reach room temp.

It's a sweet gesture, but these aren't mammals that control their body temperature, and thus can appreciate a cool drink.
 
Well, it probably gets there before they drink any, anyway. But refrigerators will get the water WAY too cold for snakes. Warmth-loving reptiles don't need to be drinking water that is around the temperature that will kill them. You'd never feed them a 3 degree (Celsius) mouse. But it's sort of a moot point, I'm sure very little if any is drank while it is that cold.

Perhaps it should be served in a daiquiri glass with a little umbrella.
 
Maybe a bit over the top not to cause arguments but what happens in the wild a lot of streams rivers ect are going to be around those temps

I don't know about anyone else, but I quite enjoy good intellectual conversations like this, and I think it opens up opportunities for all of us to learn new things.

I suspect there are not very many times/places where wild corns would be drinking from streams that are at fridge temps. Their range is in the southeast US. South of course makes it fairly warm, and being in the east rather than the west means there aren't that many high, snow covered mountains for cold snow-melt runoff to be coming from. And the time of the year when it would be that cold is when they are in brumation.

However, I think your point in general is valid, even if not for corns in particular. It is just something that should be evaluated on a species by species basis, not assumed to be true for all species, because of course their natural habitats vary widely.

Also, as others have pointed out, I don't think your herps are likely drinking enough of the cold water in the time before it warms up to have a negative effect on them. It just seems an odd choice to me to give them chilled water, but not a harmful one.
 
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