Duae
New member
This is just more for sharing info.
July 2013 - bought female western hognose, small but eager feeder.
Nov. 2013 - Female hognose developed a small kink on her back. It was not there before, we examine our snakes carefully for kinking and my husband is especially good at feeling them on the first try.
http://i91.photobucket.com/albums/k298/duae/lump_zpscf0808fd.png
Took her to the breeder, he examined her, didn't think it would be a problem but to keep an eye on it.
Over time the kink grew sharper looking and more pronounced, she continued to eat well, shed fine, but she stopped feeling right. She didn't move as freely as the others. She developed difficulty reaching up to her water bowl, so she was switched to a shallower one.
Even with the shallower one, she didn't always seem to find it, so we started gently showing it to her every day. Sometimes she would drink, sometimes not.
Last week on Tuesday she took a large pinky without any problem like usual. She always seemed to have more trouble than the others with front legs, so we gave her slightly smaller prey items.
This Thursday we went to check on her, and she had passed away. She was kept in the same conditions as the other hognose in our collection, in a rack with the warm spot at 88f, usually in carefresh but had been on paper towels for a month after a potential mite scare. (No mites were ever found in her rack, but better safe than sorry)
Right now we have several others, from the same breeder, who have grown much larger and have never shown the slightest sign of spinal problems, but it does mean we'll be watching them and future offspring very carefully.
July 2013 - bought female western hognose, small but eager feeder.
Nov. 2013 - Female hognose developed a small kink on her back. It was not there before, we examine our snakes carefully for kinking and my husband is especially good at feeling them on the first try.
http://i91.photobucket.com/albums/k298/duae/lump_zpscf0808fd.png
Took her to the breeder, he examined her, didn't think it would be a problem but to keep an eye on it.
Over time the kink grew sharper looking and more pronounced, she continued to eat well, shed fine, but she stopped feeling right. She didn't move as freely as the others. She developed difficulty reaching up to her water bowl, so she was switched to a shallower one.
Even with the shallower one, she didn't always seem to find it, so we started gently showing it to her every day. Sometimes she would drink, sometimes not.
Last week on Tuesday she took a large pinky without any problem like usual. She always seemed to have more trouble than the others with front legs, so we gave her slightly smaller prey items.
This Thursday we went to check on her, and she had passed away. She was kept in the same conditions as the other hognose in our collection, in a rack with the warm spot at 88f, usually in carefresh but had been on paper towels for a month after a potential mite scare. (No mites were ever found in her rack, but better safe than sorry)
Right now we have several others, from the same breeder, who have grown much larger and have never shown the slightest sign of spinal problems, but it does mean we'll be watching them and future offspring very carefully.