Which is exactly why when it is feeding night(s) around here it is quite hetic..Not an easy task but we make due ( actually J makes due.. )
Regards.. Tim of T and J
Tim, you didn't really elaborate much there...
I have actually gotten it down to a fairly quick process - providing nothing disrupts the flow of things. Elizabeth, our oldest, and I can feed & clean 100 of our younger snakes in around 2 hours, if we have to do the adults as well on the same night it takes about 3. If the snakes give us hassles - and sometimes they do - it can take up to 5.
When we have hatchlings in deli cups, I can feed 85 of them in under an hour - while my daughter helps by cleaning water dishes and deli cups. I simply set out the feeding dishes, put a mouse in the middle, set the snake in the dish and turn the lid of the deli cup upside down over the snake to keep it in the feeding dish. That also prevents two snakes from getting mixed up as to who is who. If they are too big for the lid to be useful, I keep empty deli cups to use in their place and just set the lids on top.
Once they get moved up to shoe boxes - it takes a bit longer, because by than they aren't going to fit under a lid or inside a deli cup very easily - so I usually place an empty feeding dish over the top to keep them from escaping while they are eating.
The adults we feed in either an empty shoe box or on top of their tupperware lids. Occasionally, I have to use a 5 gallon bucket w/ a lid (with holes in the lid, of course) to feed our big Cali king, but that's only when he's in a particular nasty mood.
Without my oldest helping out though, I wouldn't be able to get them all fed in such a timely manner. Any disruption only drags the process out longer... Breeding season throws off the routine as well, since some females refuse to eat once they are gravid, or the males are are more interested in courting.