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How did you get into corn snakes?

When I go to college, I want to study herpology, and I also want to breed reptiles, so I spent 5 months researching different reptiles, then asked my dad for a leopard gecko, then 4 months researching and saving up, and fast forward to a month ago "Dad, can I have a corn snake as well?" Soooooo, I've done 3 months research about corn snakes and I'm a very proud person, with my herps!

Good for you, especially with doing your homework BEFORE acquiring the animals! It makes transitioning into caring for them so much easier. And I am glad you found something you love to do to study and make a career out of.
 
Good for you, especially with doing your homework BEFORE acquiring the animals! It makes transitioning into caring for them so much easier. And I am glad you found something you love to do to study and make a career out of.
Thanks! Learning about the animals is just really vital! Everyone thinks I should go into art ( apparently, I'm good at art) but I do really want to do herpology, reptiles are just really fascinating!
 
My 8yr old son wanted a snake for his birthday. So I told him we would research a good beginners snake. So we chose to get a corn snake. Then my daughter who is 6 wanted one, so three months later we got another one.
 
This past summer my youngest who is my nature lover told me he wanted a pet tarantula. I have no objection to others having them but really didn't see me enjoying them (and I will never get a pet that I don't want to assume full responsibility for, no matter how much the kids swear they will take care of it). So I started doing some research into other reptile type critters and read in a couple different places that corn snakes were the best for starter snakes. Then I found this site so I could research care even more and found out about Repticon and that there was one not far from us. The whole family went and finally agreed on our first corn snake, Frederic, a caramel motley. Sadly, we lost him a few weeks ago and I am 90% sure he went down our floor vents and I doubt I will ever see him again. :(


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All my life I've grown up around snakes, mostly non-venomous, other than the copper heads/ timber-eastern DB rattlesnakes. And have always loved picking them up and looking at them, mostly rough greens and garters. Then last summer I was working (USPS non-postal employee, self employed) driving along delivering mail with my dad whom I work with, and we saw a rough green snake in the road and it was in between us and the mailbox, so I had to get out of the car to deliver the mail, to avoid running it over, then on the way back to the car my dad says "Bet you won't pick it up, chicken" (snakes are all evil and always want to bite, according to my parents) so I calmly pick it up, and get in the car and tell dad to drive. This is an adult green snake and it is pretty calm after only 1 or 2 minutes of being held, so I start trying to get dad to hold it or touch it, or even let it get close to his side of the car, and he's having none of it (who's the chicken again?) I kept it for perhaps half the day, holding it, showing it to people, then at the end of the day I turned it loose at the edge of a medium sized field that I know to be full of field mice and grasshoppers (thought I was doing him/her a favor, hope I was right). That day was my equivalent of falling down the rabbit hole, and falling the rest of the way in love with snakes. This was the first website I found JUST about corns, and where I have learned almost everything I know about them. Now that I've had my corn for nearly 3 months, I've warmed my parents up on snakes a bit, my mom has even held him, dads still iffy though. I have a Sunglow Motley named Sir Blinky Starch of Winterfell (Sir Blinky for short) who's currently in blue, and plan on getting another as soon as I can get another viv set up and ready to go. All the stories on here are really awesome, really good reading, I hope this continues!
 
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