cornmorphs
New member
they vary so much, i have yearlings at just 0ver 200 g and some that are not 100 g. they are all on pretty much the same feeding shcedule
Nice try, but IF you had actually read what I posted, I already stated I feed on a solid 7 day schedule (every Friday). So how is 8, 7, 6, and 9 day intervals more often?? My reference to aggressive is that he went from a single large pinky to a fuzzy+pinky in the course of 4 meals. That's aggressive compared to my schedule. He pointed fingers at previously listed feeding schedules as being either starvation (dead) or overfeeding (horse) and then proceeded to post his own schedule in another thread which averages to the same number of days I feed, but is more aggressive in size/quantity of what I feed. I presumed that I was one of the 'horse' feeders since I have '05's that are 14 months old and at 300 grams. Be sure to read all the information before coming at me fully loaded.CARattler40 said:Since when are 8, 7, 6, and 9-day intervals between feedings an aggressive schedule for a hatchling snake on pinkies/fuzzies? You may say it's aggressive because it's more frequent than your schedule, but I know I don't consider it to be aggressive at all, and admit (because apparently it's a horrible thing) to feeding every 4-5 days at that size.
Susan said:I must be in the minority as most of my snakes barely make 300 grms by their third year.
I must be in the minority as most of my snakes barely make 300 grms by their third year.
Thanks guys for all the answers. I am glad to see I am not the only one who's snakes take 30-36 months to get to 300gr. I was accused in another forum of underfeeding my snakes because at 14-18 months, I had some 150gr snakes. This guy said that a snake normaly fed would be more at 300gr. I feed mine every 7 days, appropriate prey. Since he is a moron and I know he's not worth the time to answer him, I wanted to verify if I was the only one in my case
I was accused in another forum of underfeeding my snakes because at 14-18 months, I had some 150gr snakes.
Drizzt80 said:Maybe HE can defend his own comments and clarify what he meant?! :shrugs80
it was a comment made to be funny, not to put down people and their feeding practices.if i tried that, i would not have any snakes as they would either die from starvation of seeing the meal or puke up the horse i just tried to feed them
Nope. Same here Susan. I have a few that just seem to take off no matter what, but most of mine take three years as well. My schedule doesn't allow for feeding any more than once a week. Sometimes a week gets skipped, sometimes they are fed an extra big meal, but for the most part, it's one appropriate sized prey item per week. I do not bump up the size as soon as possible, but the other way around, I wait until the corn shows signs that the meals are too small before I start giving them bigger items. "Signs" to me would be that the lump is not easily seen after feeding or is gone within 24 hours. It seems some people would say that it's time to bump them up if your snake doesn't look like it's about to explode after a meal, but that's just not how I raise them any more.Susan said:I must be in the minority as most of my snakes barely make 300 grms by their third year.
Thanks for the clarification. That's what I was hoping, and your 'regurge' post was timely in working through that. I hope I didn't give the impression that I was talking down to your feeding practices or your regurge, because that wasn't the case. I was, as I stated in that original post with your feed dates, just wanting to clarify that earlier 'horse' statement and find out what you had meant by it. Alls good! :grin01:gwb8568 said:and i was not referring to or pointing anyone out in particular, it was more of a sarcastic comment (most of mine are): it was a comment made to be funny, not to put down people and their feeding practices.
Excellent information you've shared carol! :cheers: A few notes to add from my own feeding practices:carol said:I feel it is good for them to have time to "search" for a meal.
I also think it is good exercise for them to "skip" a week. Sometimes I do that once a month, sometimes every other month. Keep in mind I only do this with healthy animals, and not animals recovering from breeding.
Since I revised my feeding schedule, I've had a huge drop in egg bound snakes.
My comments are not directed at anyone at all. I know the mentality on both sides because I used to get my snakes up to size very quickly when I started breeding. So when I say it's better than getting them huge and fat then trying to work it off, I'm really directing the comments to something I personally used to do.