JustineNYC
New member
I have been wondering about this for a while, Im curious what the rest of you, experiences are.
I dont have that much experience with regurges, thankfully, but I have noticed something. Why are some of them more vulnerable to them, then others?
My RO, regurged once a long time ago. I had bumped her up a size, feed her a large meal and handled her 3 days later. I thought the meal would have been gone by then, there was no lump, but the next morning, she had regurged.
My ghost regurged last year once. She had eaten in her tub, and I had come back to check and see if everyone was done. I looked at her, saw the lump and gently lifted her back into her viv. I remember thinking that I hoped she had been done swallowing, but I was in a rush. My fault....next morning she regurged.
While neither are overly sensitive to regurges, cause I caused both of them, my male abbott is totally different.
I got him in August of 2007, and he was a June hatchling, and already 100 grams. But he is a crazy eater. After he eats, I put him back into his viv, or let him crawl out on his own, and he always, always goes climbing. His mice are appropriately sized, if anything, their on the larger side, and he will always climb and become very active after eating.
On numerous occasions, I have witnessed him fall from climbing, and had just eaten, and I have thought "Oh gosh, thats going to be a regurge" and he has never had one.
Does anyone have corns that regurge for no explained reason, and then have corns that maybe should have them and dont? Are less then enthusiastic eaters more prone to them?
I dont have that much experience with regurges, thankfully, but I have noticed something. Why are some of them more vulnerable to them, then others?
My RO, regurged once a long time ago. I had bumped her up a size, feed her a large meal and handled her 3 days later. I thought the meal would have been gone by then, there was no lump, but the next morning, she had regurged.
My ghost regurged last year once. She had eaten in her tub, and I had come back to check and see if everyone was done. I looked at her, saw the lump and gently lifted her back into her viv. I remember thinking that I hoped she had been done swallowing, but I was in a rush. My fault....next morning she regurged.
While neither are overly sensitive to regurges, cause I caused both of them, my male abbott is totally different.
I got him in August of 2007, and he was a June hatchling, and already 100 grams. But he is a crazy eater. After he eats, I put him back into his viv, or let him crawl out on his own, and he always, always goes climbing. His mice are appropriately sized, if anything, their on the larger side, and he will always climb and become very active after eating.
On numerous occasions, I have witnessed him fall from climbing, and had just eaten, and I have thought "Oh gosh, thats going to be a regurge" and he has never had one.
Does anyone have corns that regurge for no explained reason, and then have corns that maybe should have them and dont? Are less then enthusiastic eaters more prone to them?