As I'm sure anyone can imagine, a palmetto is still a pretty expensive investment. But even beyond that, I really loved my little boy. I purchased from Travis Whisler, the snake seemed very healthy and alert when he arrived, and he accepted his first feeding. I thought everything would be fine.
However, the following day, I found the pinkie had been regurgitated. So of course I got very worried, and contacted Travis to see if maybe the snake was used to eating live vs. frozen/thawed. We went over tank temperatures and conditions, etc. and neither of us could figure out why it had happened. He told me to try feeding him in the tank next time, with no handling until he was eating regularly again.
Less than a week later, today I noticed him in his tank with his head upside down and not moving. When I took him out, he was completely limp, and non-responsive, with his neck area already starting to stiffen up.
This is the second baby I've had who has died. I do have another corn snake who is completely fine, he eats regularly, has never regurgitated, and I've had him for several months with zero issues. Both tank setups are entirely the same, but the only thing I lacked from the first baby I lost was a temp monitor/regulator. So I got one right away, set it all up, so that on the warm end it is consistently kept at around 86F.
I had that all set up before I received my palmetto. I've double checked several different care sheets to see if there's something I missed, if I did something wrong, and the only thing I've found is that I didn't wait exactly 10 days before handling/feeding. It was more like 7 days. But surely a difference of 3 days wouldn't lead to this??
I've only had the palmetto for about 2 weeks. I'm heartbroken, since this was my dream snake, and lord knows he cost quite a bundle, so that's a lot of money lost as well. I'm just struggling to sort out what in the world I'm doing wrong, especially when my other snake is perfectly healthy in the exact same conditions.
I'll post a picture, in case anyone might be able to recognize something that might be wrong. His tail definitely looks as if he's dehydrated, or potentially starved, but that makes no sense because I always keep fresh water available, and when I tried to feed him he threw the pinkie up, but was feeding fine for the breeder before I got him.
However, the following day, I found the pinkie had been regurgitated. So of course I got very worried, and contacted Travis to see if maybe the snake was used to eating live vs. frozen/thawed. We went over tank temperatures and conditions, etc. and neither of us could figure out why it had happened. He told me to try feeding him in the tank next time, with no handling until he was eating regularly again.
Less than a week later, today I noticed him in his tank with his head upside down and not moving. When I took him out, he was completely limp, and non-responsive, with his neck area already starting to stiffen up.
This is the second baby I've had who has died. I do have another corn snake who is completely fine, he eats regularly, has never regurgitated, and I've had him for several months with zero issues. Both tank setups are entirely the same, but the only thing I lacked from the first baby I lost was a temp monitor/regulator. So I got one right away, set it all up, so that on the warm end it is consistently kept at around 86F.
I had that all set up before I received my palmetto. I've double checked several different care sheets to see if there's something I missed, if I did something wrong, and the only thing I've found is that I didn't wait exactly 10 days before handling/feeding. It was more like 7 days. But surely a difference of 3 days wouldn't lead to this??
I've only had the palmetto for about 2 weeks. I'm heartbroken, since this was my dream snake, and lord knows he cost quite a bundle, so that's a lot of money lost as well. I'm just struggling to sort out what in the world I'm doing wrong, especially when my other snake is perfectly healthy in the exact same conditions.
I'll post a picture, in case anyone might be able to recognize something that might be wrong. His tail definitely looks as if he's dehydrated, or potentially starved, but that makes no sense because I always keep fresh water available, and when I tried to feed him he threw the pinkie up, but was feeding fine for the breeder before I got him.
