By your last post it seems that you are the one trying to pick a fight. You made a statement, you were
corrected, have a nice day. Geez. :shrugs:Jay
I do not see that he was corrected, rather others disagreed with or had differing opinions. That doesn't make his opinion incorrect no matter the lack of experience. There are NUMEROUS posts on this forum where people advise results of good clutches they produced from properly sized, healthy 2 year old female corns.
And on a final note all breeding Is a risk. Young or old. Some more risky than others. Have a Good one.
Exactly correct. Two years ago I had a 5 year old female become egg bound and all previous breedings went off without a hitch. Likewise, someone also shipped me a pair of 1 year old corns in the same pillow case. Apparently they bred because she laid 6 tiny tiny eggs later that year. Not sure if they were good or bad because they were laid in the water bowl (didn't know she was gravid). She never grew much more and always laid small clutches of 6 eggs or less. People asked for examples, there are two.
On topic: Chad, while you did not explicitly say "Start breeding at age 2, they do fine and dandy!", you did say it implicitly by not mentioning any of the potential hazards.
Based on this statement, then if I post a photo of my 3 year old pair of Pied Sided Bloodreds breeding, then I would need to add a disclaimer stating that there are potential hazards. After all, 3 year old corns could have problems during the entire breeding process just the same as a 7 year old female could have problems.
I was 5'3" when I was 11, certainly "big enough" to have babies. But despite my ovaries giving the green light, the rest of me was not ready. The same can be said for corn snakes.
I have seen this analogy twice and just not sure how it applies to this thread. Physically, once a human female begins menstrutaing then she can produce children, we all surely agree with that, but that is no where close to corns. IF IF IF human women delivered babies or eggs that were to be incubated and then left them and had no other connection, then of course these two would be similar. However, women care for their children both physically and pshycologically and snakes do not so this to me is a ridiculous comparision.
Also, what the heck does height have to do with humans producing babies? I was unaware there was a height requirement. Shhh, better not tell the "vertically challenged" people. Guess they haven't read the rule book advising proper breeding heights in humans.
Do I need to use smaller words? By not saying that breeding at age 2 can cause problems, you said that breeding at age 2 does not cause problems.
Sorry, I disagree with you and the others who insinuate this. Like I stated above, based on your statment here, then by ANY breeder NOT stating that breeding their 4 year old corns have potential problems, they are saying there will not be any problems. That is what you stated.
I do not know Chad but I think perhaps he may have been a previous irritant to some of you guys and therefore is taking the brunt of several posters. Sorry if this offends you Chad and I am not saying you are an irritant, this is just my observation/opinion on why you are being "virtually smacked around"
Sometimes its not that you could, but if you should. A six month dog could breed. Does that mean you should breed it? An 11 year old child could have babies. Does that mean they should?
Ethics my friend, Ethics! Is it ethical to breed an animal, just because you can?
Wayne
See my post above, this is a ridiculous argument, humans and snakes are not alike, this is more like comparing apples and hammers, not apples and oranges.
I've bred females at two years old and had no problems. I've bred females at three years old (and older) and had retained eggs, infertile eggs, etc. And vice versa. I've also had two year old females who I haven't bred from, who decided they were mature enough and so produced a clutch of slugs instead. Personally - if I have a two year old of good size producing follicles, I put a male in with her, as then at least I have a chance of eggs rather than slugs (in my experience there are more problems when a snake tries to lay a clutch of slugs than a clutch of fertile eggs).
Don Soderberg says it better than I can:
Your poll question implies that something is wrong with breeding sub two-year old corns. Viewers should be aware that age has very little to do with sexual maturity in snakes. Likewise, youth is no indication that there will be problems in corn snake breedings, but corns that are TOO SMALL to breed can be a big problem. Generally speaking, all nine-month old collies are the same size. Corn snakes (like most other serpent species) are not mature by age alone, and therefore can be between 14 and 48 inches by their second birthday. Granted some males over 30" long will not readily breed, indicating that both size AND age can play a role in sexual maturity, but conversely, I have seen four and five-year old female corns whose health was in potential danger if they were gravid.
I think it is wrong to equate maturity with age, unless you make a comment about the role SIZE plays in breeding criteria. EACH time you post about maturity, you should make some statement regarding size Vs age. Otherwise, you send an incorrect message to some of the less-seasoned corn keepers reading this forum. Since corns can safely reach a length of 36 " in ONE year, I think you would facilitate education about breeding corns better if you didn't solely cite age as a pre-requisite to maturity. Sorry to say that three different ways, but I want it to soak in.
It's fine to have an educated opinion about something this important, but I believe it's prudent to include information regarding opposing data. I do not judge you for saying it is your opinion that it's wrong to breed young corns, but I must point out to readers of this forum that age is not THE pre-requisite to safe corn snake breeding.
My general goal for breeding female corns is to do so when they are over 36" long (if heavy and healthy enough). This year, I have two female corns from 2007 that are gravid. Both are over 36" long and I have NO reservations about doing this. Some corns at 40" are not safe to breed. Approximately 60% of my females are ready to breed before their second birthdays. Virtually all of the other 40% are bred before their third b'days, BUT not all of them. Sometimes, four years of maturity is necessary. As it is with everything, no two corns are alike, so I caution everyone to consider size when determining the sexual "maturity", and NOT age.
Well, why isn't anyone smacking Don and Stephen around for stating it is ok to breed at two years old IF THE GIRL IS HEALTHY. Stephen hits a very good point in his post also. The females need to be excersized properly. In my opinion, obesity and lack of excersize are probably the two major contributors to issues for the females during breeding and laying. Most people tend ot know when a girl is too small and thin, but don't tend to think obesity is a major problem. Same goes for a male, obesity will kill the desire fater than any other factor.
BTW, Jim mentioned the wc corn, that was a female I caught in SC. It was my 2nd ever corn and she was a gravid wc corn at 26 inches long and she laid 12 perfectly healthy eggs. There were no bad eggs and all the babies hatched with no issues. As a side note, she did not lay the eggs until the last week in July of that year. I kept her for two more years with no ill affects of her breeding size. When I sold her, she was 34 inches long.
sorry for the long post, I am tired and sleepy, hopefully most of it makes sense, if not then oh well, I tried.
dc
dc