This forum's got some crazy ideas conjured up. In the wild how many snakes do you think die from one well placed rodent bite? If your snake dies because a live rodent bit it once, you're feeding it food items that are way to big. As I've stated, I feed a lot of live food to Ball Pythons, and I've never seen a snake get bit, much less injured. the rish of live feeding lies not with the fact the rodent may bite your snake, but the fact that the caretaker is blatant idiot and leaves live mice/rats in with their snake for too long resulting in the snake getting nibbled on.
I don't support live feeding for animals that take F/T because of the extremely minimal risk that is posed to the snake. I do support live feeding for picky snakes like Ball Pythons, and rare snakes that don't take rodents in the wild. My female Cat-Eyed Snake eats live, and I couldn't be happier! She's eating and that's what matters at this point, she's feeding. Now I've spent a lot of time thinking about this whole debate and I relized something.......crickets. If you feed live crickets you should not say anything about live feeding because a live cricket can inflict just as much damage as a rodent can. I've seen lizards torn to shreds by live crickets. We never think twice when we feed those. It hasn't been sensationalized, so people don't pay attention to it. I personally don't feed many crickets, because I've found a species of roach that AFTs take with ease, but when I do feed crickets I won't leave them in overnight because they will bite the hell out of your lizards. That's just some food for thought.
the rish of live feeding lies not with the fact the rodent may bite your snake, but the fact that the caretaker is blatant idiot and leaves live mice/rats in with their snake for too long resulting in the snake getting nibbled on.
Is this not a forum where I can speak my experiences? Aaron, I am going off of personal experience. I really appriciated Nanci's posts, and actually enjoyed the nice debate. I am not the be all and end all and I have never claimed to be.
I have a young corn snake that is presently on fuzzies. I breed my own mice but i don't have enough colonies, nor do i want more, to provide the perfect LIVE size every 5 days...So what i would like to do is feed her f/t until she get's big enough for adult mice. Right now she doesn't constrict her meals, and i have tried tugging on the mouse to make it seem like it's alive with little luck. I'm wondering if when she is ready for full grown mice, if she will be able to constrict and kill them properly? (i realize i could just keep her on f/t, but i like to watch them eat naturally thanks guys!
In my experience, in all species of animals I have kept as pets- dogs, cats, horses, snakes, lizards, human children- while you _can_ sometimes see live worms in droppings, it is far more likely that you will see no visible signs of parasitic worm infestation without a microscopic examination of a fecal sample.
Comparing feeding live rodents to feeding live crickets isn't really a good argument at all.
First of all, virtually NO insectivorous reptile will eat prekilled insects. And I think every anti-live person here is fine with it if done responsibly for snakes that absolutely refuse prekilled, which realistically, is RARE. So there's that. Then there's the fact that invertebrates don't feel pain, vertebrates like mice do. Add that to the fact that crickets will rarely be able to inflict any wounds on a healthy reptile in a decent enclosure. However, a rat can inflict a potentially deadly wound on even the healthiest snake.... because accidents happen. It's actually really common for wild snakes to have scars on them from food that fought back.
And I also wanted to say... don't ever take your own personal experience as the end all be all fact. I have fed live as well to ball pythons. I have personally seen balls get bitten by rats, non life threatening wounds but still, a bite that could get infected. So don't you dare imply that snakes never get injured by food because you've never seen it. Because they do. Even if you are right there, even if the food is well fed, even if the animal is healthy. Nobody, no creature, is perfect and even the best snakes can be killed.
To the OP, I think someone already said it but generally corns will start striking and constricting when they are on fuzzies/larger. Some never constrict f/t because they know they don't have to, others go all out. I have no doubt that your snake would, eventually and out of instinct and not personal pleasure, strike and constrict a mouse. Killing it slowly, painfully, and avoidably. It's safety will be at risk, no one can deny that. The mouse will be in an unimaginable amount of pain and fear, also something no one can deny. A situation that can easily be avoided with compassion from you, the owner. Compassion for your snake, compassion for the mouse.
David, I was going to try to not reply to this thread, but this quote really got me... You are calling people idiots and stating that the reason that their snake got bit was because the mouse was left with the snake for too long.
There are many people out there that have lost snakes, not because they left the mouse with their snake for a long time, but because the mouse turned and brained the snake while being constricted.
Stating that "the risk is because they are idiots and leave a live mouse in the pen" is in itself an idiotic and inexperienced answer.
You may not have ever had a snake get bitten by a mouse, but I have. It only took a split second and I am extremely lucky that it did not brain her. And, this was with a snake that had been fed LIVE her whole life! So, how about you do a little more research and try to learn this time, because I personally am tired of hearing about your "Thousands of snakes fed" experience... The excuse for your ignorance is old, learn some at the place that you work, don't just use it as a "I am so cool because this is my job" thing.
Look at me, I have 20 + years with RES turtles, but in no way do I claim that my knowledge is better than everyone else's. Look at the ones here who have decades of experience on you when it comes to reptiles. None of them rub it in your face to try and get their point across. In fact, many of them are extremely respectful, no matter how obnoxious you reply to them.
In fact, many of your responses to Nanci have been rather obnoxious as well. She posted scientific facts, and you came back at her with a "Well where I work" type answer. You are not the know all end all on these types of discussions.
Is this not a forum where I can speak my experiences? Aaron, I am going off of personal experience. I really appriciated Nanci's posts, and actually enjoyed the nice debate. I am not the be all and end all and I have never claimed to be.
ummm wasn't this post about corn snakes and feeding f/t or live mice? I mean i could be wrong.. just saying