Sasheena
Addicted
Next year I'm probably going to give my snakes the option of sphagnum moss, or sphagnum PEAT moss (like dirt). This year I gave them vermiculite. Aphrodite, my beautiful normal corn, finished laying but had some vermiculite in her mouth, now I'm dealing with a case of mouth rot. Calypso, my "maybe gravid, maybe not" snake was in her laying box and I pulled her out when I saw she had some vermiculite in her mouth. I left her half in the box, but was trying to swab out the vermiculite, frightened she would get sick too. Of course I wasn't even sure she was gravid, but as soon as I finished swabbing out her mouth, I saw she'd laid a fertile egg! I feel twice as bad as before... bad that I gave her a laying substrate that could cause her illness, WORSE that I was messing with her while she was trying to lay eggs. Hubby's going to the store and when he gets back I'm removing the laying boxes I have left that have vermiculite in them, and will replace them with the peat moss. It's dirty stuff, but it was fine last year for one of my kings as a laying substrate. After the eggs are laid I'll just move them to the vermiculite, which is fine for incubating eggs.
Anyway, thought I would vent to the people who care. *sigh* I feel so bad for Calypso. Rather than continue to move her around, I've just left her on my computer desk, as I would have to move her physically to put her and the egg laying box back in her enclosure (she's half laying on the lid and half laying inside the box, the lid is open, so it's just an impossible situation.
I guess the good news is... she's laying her eggs! 9 days after shedding. 39 days after her first breeding.
Anyway, thought I would vent to the people who care. *sigh* I feel so bad for Calypso. Rather than continue to move her around, I've just left her on my computer desk, as I would have to move her physically to put her and the egg laying box back in her enclosure (she's half laying on the lid and half laying inside the box, the lid is open, so it's just an impossible situation.
I guess the good news is... she's laying her eggs! 9 days after shedding. 39 days after her first breeding.