Roy Munson
New member
I have zero experience with R.I., so I'm looking for a little expert advice/reassurance here. My '05 male emoryi will only accept live food. About four days ago, he refused a live hopper too. When I took him out, he looked dull like he was going into shed. He had that puffy-throated look that snakes get while in shed, but in addition, he was also very "clicky". This scared me, so I checked the tub temps in my racks and they were far below what the Helix was reading. This guy was on a bottom shelf in the rack, so I really started worrying.
Of course, I used the 'search' function, and read every thread about R.I. that I could find. So I set him up in a warmer enclosure, outside of the racks. The next day, I see him gaping, and even when his mouth was closed, his jaws didn't seem properly aligned. I checked the temps, and they were way too high (~95) on the warm end, but low 80s on the cool side. Despite this, he was hanging out and gaping on the warm end. Never saw a speck of mucous, even when his mouth was wide open. I adjusted temps, and after a few hours, the gaping stopped. However, his jaws still seemed mis-aligned.
Last night he shed, and so I just took him out this morning to examine him. He's perfect. No clicking, or wheezing-- jaws are properly aligned. I even gave him a little workout, but still no sign of a problem. My question: could all of this worrying have been for nothing? I'm glad I was prompted to evaluate and correct my rack temp issue, but I've felt terrible for days about ol' Leroy. I've never seen a shed have that extreme an effect on a snake, have you? In light of all this, do you think that the gaping was the result of the "recovery enclosure" temps after all? Could a real R.I. have cleared up that quickly?
I'm going to try feeding him today. It will be an f/t attempt, so I don't expect success.
Of course, I used the 'search' function, and read every thread about R.I. that I could find. So I set him up in a warmer enclosure, outside of the racks. The next day, I see him gaping, and even when his mouth was closed, his jaws didn't seem properly aligned. I checked the temps, and they were way too high (~95) on the warm end, but low 80s on the cool side. Despite this, he was hanging out and gaping on the warm end. Never saw a speck of mucous, even when his mouth was wide open. I adjusted temps, and after a few hours, the gaping stopped. However, his jaws still seemed mis-aligned.
Last night he shed, and so I just took him out this morning to examine him. He's perfect. No clicking, or wheezing-- jaws are properly aligned. I even gave him a little workout, but still no sign of a problem. My question: could all of this worrying have been for nothing? I'm glad I was prompted to evaluate and correct my rack temp issue, but I've felt terrible for days about ol' Leroy. I've never seen a shed have that extreme an effect on a snake, have you? In light of all this, do you think that the gaping was the result of the "recovery enclosure" temps after all? Could a real R.I. have cleared up that quickly?
I'm going to try feeding him today. It will be an f/t attempt, so I don't expect success.