I am going to start off with the back story:
I went to a reptile convention last weekend, and I ended up getting a hatchling cornsnake as a complete impulse buy. When I went I had no intentions of getting a snake, I had done no research about corn snakes, and I knew the bare minimum about keeping snakes in general. There was a table full of corn snake hatchlings with some amels that I thought were completely adorable and when I saw all of the amels selling out I panicked and bought the last one. The seller said that it was a female amel x gold dust (I know what amel means, but some explanation of the gold dust would be nice). She was on sale as an "out of the egg special" for $15 meaning she had not already eaten. I named her Cornelia the first day because I had been reading a book about ancient rome and the name seemed to suit her. I am not confident in the gender identification given so the name can be changed to Cornelius if needed. I carried her around in her little container at the expo for a few hours and then left for home.
On the way home I stopped at a pet store and bought a live pinky for her. The pinky was super new, it still had a gooey umbilical cord and some afterbirth on it. When I got home I put Cornelia in a critter keeper with some shredded newspaper to hide under and let her relax for an hour or two. Then I took the pinky out of the bag I had it in (the gooey parts had dried to the bag, it was really gross) and put it in the critter keeper in front of her face. She immediately put her face up to it and started smelling it and then eating it. She ate it very enthusiastically while my boyfriend and I watched. I was relieved after that, because while I was letting her settle I read about how hatchlings could be problem feeders, so I figured since she ate so fast even with us watching I would have no problem with that. She kept it down, and did not regurge or appear to have any problems digesting it. I put the critter keeper on top of a television that stays on all the time in out house. I arranged it so that one end of the container was on top of the tv and stayed at about 90 degrees, and the other end was on styrofoam and was about room temperature.
I tried to feed her again wednesday night, 4 days after first feed, in the critter keeper and she wouldn't take it. This pinky was not as newborn as the first one and might have been a good bit bigger, I couldn't really tell. I took it out and froze it, the next day I transferred her to one of those plastic shoeboxes so she could stretch all of the way out and roam around some if she wanted, with some tiny holes drilled in it and put several hides in there and put it on top of tv with the same temp arrangement as before. The next night, friday night, I thawed the pinky and heated it up with some warm water and brained it and put it in front of her hide and covered her container and left her alone all night, she did not eat. Yesterday I bought another pinky, the smallest one I could get, and put it in her container overnight. It was still uneaten this morning. It has been 8 days now since she ate, I am planning on waiting a while (5 days?) before I try again, and leaving her alone in the meantime. Advice on this plan would be appreciated. How long should she be able to go without eating before I get really worried if she has only had one meal?
I did buy a heating mat yesterday, but I don't have a thermostat so I'm wary of using it yet.
I also have a couple other questions:
How do I tell if my amel is about to shed? I'm assuming her eyes won't turn blue like the normals.
Would it be ok for me to move her into a new tank soon (10 or 20 gallons) if I find one soon, or have I been switching her around too much already?
How important is lighting? The room she is staying in has the lights off most of the time, could that cause problems?
I'm sure I'll think of more questions, if so I will just add them to the thread.
Thanks in advance to anyone that can help me out!
I went to a reptile convention last weekend, and I ended up getting a hatchling cornsnake as a complete impulse buy. When I went I had no intentions of getting a snake, I had done no research about corn snakes, and I knew the bare minimum about keeping snakes in general. There was a table full of corn snake hatchlings with some amels that I thought were completely adorable and when I saw all of the amels selling out I panicked and bought the last one. The seller said that it was a female amel x gold dust (I know what amel means, but some explanation of the gold dust would be nice). She was on sale as an "out of the egg special" for $15 meaning she had not already eaten. I named her Cornelia the first day because I had been reading a book about ancient rome and the name seemed to suit her. I am not confident in the gender identification given so the name can be changed to Cornelius if needed. I carried her around in her little container at the expo for a few hours and then left for home.
On the way home I stopped at a pet store and bought a live pinky for her. The pinky was super new, it still had a gooey umbilical cord and some afterbirth on it. When I got home I put Cornelia in a critter keeper with some shredded newspaper to hide under and let her relax for an hour or two. Then I took the pinky out of the bag I had it in (the gooey parts had dried to the bag, it was really gross) and put it in the critter keeper in front of her face. She immediately put her face up to it and started smelling it and then eating it. She ate it very enthusiastically while my boyfriend and I watched. I was relieved after that, because while I was letting her settle I read about how hatchlings could be problem feeders, so I figured since she ate so fast even with us watching I would have no problem with that. She kept it down, and did not regurge or appear to have any problems digesting it. I put the critter keeper on top of a television that stays on all the time in out house. I arranged it so that one end of the container was on top of the tv and stayed at about 90 degrees, and the other end was on styrofoam and was about room temperature.
I tried to feed her again wednesday night, 4 days after first feed, in the critter keeper and she wouldn't take it. This pinky was not as newborn as the first one and might have been a good bit bigger, I couldn't really tell. I took it out and froze it, the next day I transferred her to one of those plastic shoeboxes so she could stretch all of the way out and roam around some if she wanted, with some tiny holes drilled in it and put several hides in there and put it on top of tv with the same temp arrangement as before. The next night, friday night, I thawed the pinky and heated it up with some warm water and brained it and put it in front of her hide and covered her container and left her alone all night, she did not eat. Yesterday I bought another pinky, the smallest one I could get, and put it in her container overnight. It was still uneaten this morning. It has been 8 days now since she ate, I am planning on waiting a while (5 days?) before I try again, and leaving her alone in the meantime. Advice on this plan would be appreciated. How long should she be able to go without eating before I get really worried if she has only had one meal?
I did buy a heating mat yesterday, but I don't have a thermostat so I'm wary of using it yet.
I also have a couple other questions:
How do I tell if my amel is about to shed? I'm assuming her eyes won't turn blue like the normals.
Would it be ok for me to move her into a new tank soon (10 or 20 gallons) if I find one soon, or have I been switching her around too much already?
How important is lighting? The room she is staying in has the lights off most of the time, could that cause problems?
I'm sure I'll think of more questions, if so I will just add them to the thread.
Thanks in advance to anyone that can help me out!