Phruit Dish
Bringer of Meeses
I noticed something this morning that concerned me. Birch (my cubed normal yearling) took a long drink of water, moved her jaw around a bit, yaaaaaaaawned wide for me, and proceeded to rub the tip of her nose on her mopani wood, something she normally only does to start her shed. She interacted with me for a bit, then went for another good long drink. She seemed a bit agitated or otherwise bothered, rubbing her nose and her chin on both the wood and on a coil of her own body, moving her mouth in a way that struck me as odd, opening a back corner a touch, sometimes opening all of her mouth a fraction. While I was observing her, she gave me two huge yawns and a lot of smaller openings of her mouth, all of which looked healthy and clear -- no saliva, mucous, or discharge. I did see a drop of fluid on her chin twice, though, once that I'm sure was right after drinking, which she 'wiped' off on the wood...but then continued her nose- and chin-rubbing after that briefly before stopping. She also may have sneezed twice, the sound and movement so tiny I'm honestly not sure that I didn't imagine it.
All of this happened in a very brief period of time, perhaps no more than 30-60 seconds, and has never occurred prior to this moring. She was fed two and a half days ago, so I'm not surprised that she was thirsty. She's not in blue or moving toward that phase presently. Humidity is between 44-47%, cool side temp is between 72-76°F, and warm side temp is between 83-88°F on the glass. She has several inches of eco-earth substrate because she enjoys actively burrowing so much that I say she has an identity crisis, thinking at times that she's a sand boa. I keep a low point of substrate over the center of her UTH in her warm hide; she spends her digesting days in or under that hide for warmth.
I took Birch out to examine her, and her behavior was normal. Lots of tongue flicking, very curious and friendly, active behavior. No more nose rubbing, mouth movement, or sneezing. No drool or discharge. Everything was so normal that I'm thinking I may have just caught an odd moment or imagined things and overreacted.
Can corn snakes occasionally sneeze without it being a symptom of an RI? A bit of dust, maybe? My husband is all but certain I'm overreacting.
Granted, if I hear or see this behavior once more this morning, I'm calling my vet for an emergency visit. I don't at all like that this is happening on a Friday with the weekend looming, as the 'wait-and-see' approach becomes a riskier thing.
Any advice?
All of this happened in a very brief period of time, perhaps no more than 30-60 seconds, and has never occurred prior to this moring. She was fed two and a half days ago, so I'm not surprised that she was thirsty. She's not in blue or moving toward that phase presently. Humidity is between 44-47%, cool side temp is between 72-76°F, and warm side temp is between 83-88°F on the glass. She has several inches of eco-earth substrate because she enjoys actively burrowing so much that I say she has an identity crisis, thinking at times that she's a sand boa. I keep a low point of substrate over the center of her UTH in her warm hide; she spends her digesting days in or under that hide for warmth.
I took Birch out to examine her, and her behavior was normal. Lots of tongue flicking, very curious and friendly, active behavior. No more nose rubbing, mouth movement, or sneezing. No drool or discharge. Everything was so normal that I'm thinking I may have just caught an odd moment or imagined things and overreacted.
Can corn snakes occasionally sneeze without it being a symptom of an RI? A bit of dust, maybe? My husband is all but certain I'm overreacting.
Granted, if I hear or see this behavior once more this morning, I'm calling my vet for an emergency visit. I don't at all like that this is happening on a Friday with the weekend looming, as the 'wait-and-see' approach becomes a riskier thing.
Any advice?