Oh I missed this post, Sean. Dangerous how? Right from the start I've stated that this one may well end in tears, and told Trimmer there's no guarantee that she'll survive. I'm realistic that Skooge never fed voluntraily from hatching and am still not sure if she has kinks or if her odd movement in her back end is due to loss of muscle.Eremita said:I think you're setting a dangerous precedent there, Janine, but I applaud your big heart and nursing mojo. Skooge is a cutie, too, so I'm rooting for her. Good luck.
Maybe one day you can recoup some costs by distributing "Janine's mouse juice" worldwide to households with reluctant feeders and queasy owners.
-Sean
Blutengel said:Janine, how do you manage to put in the tip of the syringe into her throat? She cannot put her mouth around the thicker part of the syringe I assume... even if you manage to put the thinner part in completely, it does get as deep as maybe 0.4 inch I guess.... so the baby must 'transport' the mousse itself to her stomach, right?
Eremita said:Hmm, "mousse". That sounds better than "mouse puree", and when you pronounce it it's just like "moose", everyone's fave mouse-euphemism. Maybe not quite accurate enough though: you'd probably have to fold in some whipped egg-whites or something to get that mousse-like texture in your mouse-mousse (sorry, Barbara).
-Sean
Woah there, I never said I have saved every thing! I certainly am not some kind of st Francis, and have made it quite clear to Trimmer that a hatchling that never fed is going to be at risk of dying no matter what I do. This situation arose after pms texts and 'phone calls, I'm not going to open my doors to every snake with feeding problems in this country!Eremita said:Anyway, Janine, yes, the bird example is just what I feared; word gets around and suddenly you're finding bundles of deli-cups at your front door with scraggly-looking, emaciated corn snakes, and you end up with mondo collection of lovely corn snakes you can't breed because they're all at the wrong end of the viable-genes spectrum. But I guess you have somehow surmounted such hurdles in the past via the direct route of saving every one of them and being ready for more.
This goes beyond your initial posts where the justification was that Lil was your pet so you would do what was necessary to help her. You seem to be some kind of amazing bringer-of-life to young creatures in need. I am impressed and humbled; I'm glad you are a mom so that you can hand down your genes or teaching or whatever it is. And I know how modest you are, but you deserve to be proud of what you do. Skooge is very lucky to have found you - I look forward to seeing her first voluntary feeding.
-Sean