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Viper Boa

Silent Screamer

New member
I was told to post my problem here as there is viper boa owners in this forum, so i guess i'll just post the link..here ...so nothing is missed, form me retyping, i hope someone can help me, he seams to be fine, so i just need to get the bugs worked out of the viv right now i guess...
 
Well, here's a few pointers, hope they help:

1) he looks a tad big to be eating fuzzies.
2) that bard is a very bad bedding. Try using cypress mulch. It's really good at holding humidity, and it's cheap. He should also be able to burrow into it if you give him a thick enough layer.
3) chances are like tula said he's wc. So basically, get ready to have an aggressive snake the majority of it's life. if you just got it, it's probably stressed out, and if it's about to shed that will stress it out even more.
4) snakes will refuse food while in shed.
5) try offering it a f/t mouse on tongs wiggling it around. if it still refuses, offer it live and try again later. eventually it should catch on.
6) make sure to keep the humidity between 60-85%, 85% or a little over during a shed cycle.

I think that's it for now. good luck.
 
Well i just layed down a thick layer of spagnum moss, its prettty cheap, i am not goign to feed him untill next week, he loks fine, the humidity is like 50% now but i just put the hygrometer in, so it should be good i hope, i got a ceramic heater to get some air temp up, let you guys know what happens, thatnks for all the help, i knew a fuzzy would be a bit small, but i just wanted to get him to eat a bit beacuse of the move, i idnt want him to eat a full mouse then rugurge something so bit, or does it matter the size , a regurge is a regurge lol..thanks again!!
 
Seamus Healy wrote this care sheet for viper boas:

Viper boas are one of the terrestrial snakes in the genus, spending almost all their time burried under dirty, wet leaf detritus mud and other ground litter waiting for something to wander by that's edible. In order to minimize stressors and provide an environment in captivity that allows the animal to fufill these natural behaviors, I always reccomend a loose substrate suitable for digging around in. I've had a lot of luck mixing that extremely fine cocoanut fiber (bed-a-beast or t-rex has one too) with larger bark chunks (again commercially avaliable through the pet stores or orchid litter works well if you can find nice, clean, pesticide free stuff) this gives you something that will retain moisture well and won't clump up or pack down too much as the animal moves around over and through it. To this I generally add large clumps of sphagnum and occassionally cork bark- just to provide additional "hides" a little closer to the surface. Candoia are not particularly active snakes and a lot of the activity of the vipers will be under the substrate but I'd still go with an appropriately proportioned aquarium (low and wide for the ground dwellers, taller for the arboreal species in the genus)... wouldn't bother with anything to climb on at all for the vipers, they're far too heavy bodied and fossorially inclined to make use of it in any meaningful manner... a twenty long aquarium is more than enough for any adult aspera, tens or even smaller for little guys... or any appropriately sized plastic tubs or bins.

Temps... undertank heating pads or heat tape are the easiest way to maintain them... although you're shooting for ambient temps around eighty, maybe a few degrees cooler away from the heat pad and I wouldn't go much higher than 83-85 on your warm end. make sure you're checking the temperature of the substrate itself rather than the wall of the enclosure ten inches above where the animal will be... and take special care to make sure the glass isn't heating up too much above the heat pad- they will dig and can come into contact with it. For the vipers at least... they don't tend to equate heat with light since they do most their thermoregulation underneath a couple inches of rotting leaves... my experience has been that they are pretty good at not cooking themselves.

Humidity and moisture... water bowl big enough to soak in and they will use it for exactly that, although excessive soaking should be looked at for an underlying cause. The substrate can be made damp but not wet... it should clump well when squeezed, you may even get a few drops of water out of it but it should not be watery mud. Moister patches in the enclosure are acceptible for the vipers, they're built to be rained on and I am in the habit of maintaining the humidity and the substrate moisture by simply pouring water into it and turning it over a few times or dropping some nicely soaked sphagnum into the enclosure to replace any that has dried out. Aim for an ambient humidity someplace between about seventy and ninety but keep in mind for the terrestrial species (like the viper) that they'll be down where the water is in the substrate most the time anyway, don't flood them out trying to get a plastic hygrometer to read a certain way.

Handling... avoid it as much as possible, most of them don't react too well to being poked. The teeth are small and they're nonvenomous so it's not a huge concern but it's stressful for the animal and when they nail you, sometimes they can loose teeth. Not a signifigant health concern but any open holes are an invitation to infection. I've actually got a couple fat adults who I take the time to hook for that exact reason- I'm not a guy who minds a couple needle-holes in my hands, most the time vipers can't even draw blood if they tag me, but these girls hit hard enough to pull their own teeth out with regularity so for their sake... they get hooked if I've got the time. Candoia can react to handling and stress in wildly varying ways; they aren't real prone to deficating on you unless you're in the middle of probing them (usdually not needed, the external differences make visual sexing a fairly safe prospect) but some will bite where some will just fail to respond at all or do a fair imitation of a ball python- don't take docility when handled as a sign that the animal is unstressed.

Feeding... fun one. They instinctively want frogs and lizards but can *usually* be weaned off those onto rodents if the animal is unstressed and the keeper understands the idea of a feeding trigger and what real tease feeding entails. Scenting, chain feeding, altering the environment in which the food is offered and trying live prey are all acceptible routes, it's rare for even a massive adult female viper boa to ever need anything bigger than a young rat pup (eyes closed but haired, or eyes barely open and crawling at MOST) so offering toothless, defensseless rodent prey live is easier to do than it is with bigger species. There are a lot of tricks and tips and methods that various people have tried with success (or without it) for getting viper boas onto rodents and the biggest of these is an appropriate environment and lack of being poked by their owner... but some of them just won't take rodents. Ever. Be ready to find a steady supply of frogs or lizards that have been treated to kill gut fauna if you have a new animal. If you get one that readily takes rodents... well... good choice. When feeding rodents, you're offering a prey item that has a lot more calories and fat than the natural prey species for the snake would have given equal prey mass... so for adults, watch the weight. Vipers are a heavy bodied, fat snake and you want them to be thick, if you hit a point where your little sausagesnake is seeing scale seperation when it bends or "rolls" that leave scales bent outward even when the snake is straightened... cut back the food. My adults eat somewhere between every ten and fourteen days as is appropriate to the individuals body weight when they're on rodents. Do not wait for them to deficate before feeding... they tend to hang onto things they have eaten for a good long while and will also often deficate in the substrate where it can't be easily seen (if you get lucky, you may have a waterbowl user). Which just means you should be switching that substrate out on a fairly regular basis. I'd suggest a seperate container and not a lot of light for a feeding bin if you're using the substrate I suggested above.

Other information you may find useful... They don't shed too often, with the viper boas being the slowest shedders with the thickest scales in the genus. I've got adults who shed about once every eighteen months and younger adults who may shed twice a year. The keeled scales are built to get dirty... they trap and collect substrate and get stained by soil so that the animal is a close mimic for the area it's in. Immediately after a shed (which also often happens under the substrate, you may or may not find the shed itself) the animal is usually a lot lighter and brighter for a few weeks, with it's patterning much more obvious. The little guys don't shed nearly as quickly or often as many other species either, but when growing they will shed more frequently than the adults.
 
Very nice looking viper boa.

Just about anything can set these things off to go back to being lizard eaters. A rodent diet is not what they usually live on. Since almost evey one of them available is WC, you may need to go the route of lizards or scenting.
They also have very slow metabolisms so realistically one mouse a month would be fine for these.
Wait a week and offer food again. Try scenting it with an anole or house gecko.
Don't use cypress mulch. I did with mine and within a week of him spilling water everywhere, I had a mushroom start to grow.
Use the coconut husk. It holds heat and humidity well but will not breakdown from the moisture as fast as cypress.
These snakes also do not tolerate handling very well. That alone could cause it to revert back to wanting it's natural food item.
As far as it being snappy, most are. Some are calm but most will strike.

Nanci posted a caresheet by Seamus Healey. It has very good info.

These are wonderful little snakes but also very challenging at times.
 
Well i have had the viper boa for about 2 weeks now, he will not eat frozen foods, i stuck a live mouse in there today, but nothing yet:( so i amd wondering if i rubbed the mouse agaisnt my gecko would that do it lol, since i cannot get scenting that i know of around here, i really am worried but since he has a slow metabolism i am wondering maybe he is not hungry, so i am going to take the mouse out tomorrow morning, he did snap at it once, and now i am stuck with a mouse YAY :twoguns: ah well, just wanted to keep you guys posted on him...
 
Try the T-Rex lizard maker. Put a few drops on the food and place it in with the boa overnight (used thawed food).
 
Thanks for the update :)

I asked a pal about how she got hers turned round and her answer was "patience, oh and anole scenting" LOL

She only had to do that twice before she got them eating f/t.

What I do with any fussy snakes is "piggyback" food down them, IE offer a heavily scented ft mouse and just as hes finnishing the first stick a second in and he will just continue to eat. Many people do this to turn lizards eaters round. I have even seen people tie "lines" of food together. Snakes, not being the sharpest tools in the shed won't know the difference and just continue to eat their HUGE "moose". Much less stressful than forcefeeding.
 
I've had more luck scenting with a live or f/t lizard than I have with Lizard maker. Evidently it doesn't smell as much like a lizard as hoped for :)
 
well kinda another update, i found that the snake has done his"buisness" wich i assume means he has eaten lately, also i can get a deal on frozen anoles!! lol, also i can feed him live, but when i head back to my small home town they will not have live ones, but if i can get a good supply of frozen i will be fine, but i can get him mice back home, although i cannot get the scenting here:( i will have to shop online, an di do not have a credit card so i guess i will be buggin a friend, thats for the replies!!! glad people are truly trying to help :wavey:
 
You don't want to feed live anyway. You'll end up with a huge parasite load that you'll have to get rid of. The freezing will kill most of that. I'd still try scenting. The sooner you get them on pinkies the better.
 
MegF. said:
You don't want to feed live anyway. You'll end up with a huge parasite load that you'll have to get rid of. The freezing will kill most of that. I'd still try scenting. The sooner you get them on pinkies the better.

Its a larger snake Meg... Adult viper boa :p Pinkies would not suffice.

I would go down the live root if you could not get it to feed any other way. But as Meg says its not ideal.

Seriously try piggybacking ;)
 
Sorry for being kind of a pain in the rear but would there be any specific site i could order scenting online?? i did try and rub a fuzzy on my gecko but i dont think he has a strong enought scent to rub off lol, i went to T-rex's site but they are modifying it so it isn't up and running, is there any other websites that i could place the order and get it shipped to Canada. thanks again so much.
 
Ah, I thought it was a youngster that didn't want to transition. Either way, live lizards will build up a parasite load rapidly. That's how all the wild caught stuff get them. When I scent, I make sure I wash the food animal well in something like Ivory soap and then rinse well. Then I scent it.
 
small question, how long do they constrict before eating their pray, becuase he killed the live mouse, but he is still squeezing the crap out of it and its been about 6 hours i think..thanks ahead
 
big bummer, he killed the mouse right, well he didnt eat it, and they are both sitting in the water, he llet his grip go. should i leave the mouse in there with him over night again, and take it out in the morning??
thanks again...
 
I'd leave it overnight and leave him alone. Don't keep checking on him if you can avoid it. Just leave him be until morning and then if it's not eaten, take it out.
 
Well now i am verry worried, he killed the mouse, so i left it in with him, but when i got home tonight i wanted to die from the smell, i had to get rid of the mouse because i can't miss any sleep(busy week at school), so should i try a frozen mouse in about 3 days again, or try live, thing is i have to leave him with a good friend of mine over march break, so i really want him to eat before then.....thanks :eek1:
 
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