Seeing if there are any other reptile/amphibian keepers here on these boards. I've owned a few different kingsnakes in the past, but currrently only have one snake, my purple albino retic which is only about a month old, and I've had for about a week now. Anyways, if there's anyother enthusiasts on here chime in fuckers.:mad:
Pics of my retic - Big Moe
Comments
I won't spam your thread with all my reptiles. I'll make my own thread soon.
I have: 40+ Leopard Geckos, 12 or 13 snakes, can't remember (corns kings, pythons, and boas), a blue tonge skink, a bearded dragon, a savannha monitor, a tiger salamander, and two cats.
Clark Strain albinism comes in white, lavender, and purple. I'm still a little uncertain too about this guy wether he is lav or purple since he IS rather light for some of the purples out there, but the intensity of the color leads me to believe it's a purple since a lot of lavenders look alot more "washed out".
Jesus fuck that is a ton of geckos though. Why so many?
I don't think I'll ever own another non-python. After helping my friend raise his few and finally getting my own, if I ever want a small snake I'll just hock up the cash and buy a dwarf/super-dwarf retic. So cute.:p
I have geckos cause they're ridiculously easy to keep.
I also have a variety because I have lots of ongoing breeding projects that I'm working on.
I also tend to take in rescues, I have a soft spot for little injured/sick leos and I'm damn good at making them all better.
Some of my collection:
Anyways, anyone on here seen one "gaping"? (lol-gaping..hehe..heheh..ehehe)
I had one of my pall pythons with a stuck open jaw on one side for a day or so. I made her eat another smaller mouse and she corrected it herself.
You had best keep that thing properly maintained and caged in its later years. I've heard of many starting enthusiasts becoming broke and ditching their shit in the American wild or it getting loose and consuming their children or pets. There is a new pandemic in the Southeastern US due to this. Please pardon my assclownishness. Seriously though it is a beautiful specimen. How often do you feed it (I know not the true cost of maintenance but from what I gather it ain't cheap)?
The most expensive thing is the cage and the snake itself. Food isn't all that expensive if you can afford (in the later years) a good-sized rabbit every 10 days or so. It just get's so big eventually you have to convert a room or build a bigggg ass enclosure. Like I said I've had this one for about 4.5 days, tried feeding it two days ago and it didn't seem to want the f/t fuzzie so we's tryin' again tonight. If he doesn't eat tonight I'm gonna go buy one of those red-heat lamps for at night, try that out and see how he likes it, wait a couple days and try again on a freshly stunned.
If I wanted to get rid of this one I'm sure I could find a buyer somewhere-there's no need to just let it out in the wild. That's just stupid considering it's worth more when it's breeding size, and more if it's a proven breeder.
Mice are pretty fucking cheap.
Total though, snake+the cage I ordered cost me ~1100 bucks
snake - $450
cage ~ $600
I know nigh nothing about herpetology, so I am willing to admit my ignorance. I just watched a documentary on Nat Geo showing the invasion of reticulated and Burmese pythons potentially interbreeding in the Everglades to possibly produce a new hybrid.
retic x burmese is called a bateater
bateater x retic is a jungle
the only person I know who has a jungle is Ben Renick, and he has an albino anaconda too.:eek:
The "Jungle" is quite something though...
http://www.benrenick.com/jungle_rt.html
Edit: He did not eat. :mad: hi ho hi ho it's off to buy more shit we go...:o
Leave it alone, it probably needs time to acclimate. Give it a good hide and some heat and let it explore for a while before you shove food in it's face and start taking pictures of it.
I wouldn't even be handling it until at least a couple weeks after bringing it in (I also have to worry about quarantine) I usually wait a week to feed any snake I acquire.
Stress is a big life-shortener for snakes. Especially if they're in a new environment.
As far as herps go, my only experience has been that of Turtles and Tortoises. I've kept and bred box turtles, red eared sliders, kept mud turtles but unsuccessfully mated them, and owned a couple of old desert tortoises for a little less than a year.
Unfortunately that was a long time ago and I don't have pics except for my last pair of red eared sliders which were around 15 years old which I recently released in a nice little lake. Hopefully they can survive on their own even though they spent so much time in captivity.
They are very easy to take care of and breed as long as they have a right enclosure, environment and food. Maybe not as entertaining as other herps like snakes and lizards (which I also adore), but hey, some of us love those creatures
I always thought tortoises were pretty sweet-I didn't think you could own them though. I thought they were all like endangered? I mean like the big BIG ones. Arent hose the desert tortoises
Most tortoises are endangered and under the CITES protection = proof of breeding must follow the animal from birth through all sales in its life. The new rules require a picture of the bottom shield (which is unique in each individual) for some species. The irony though is that the Greek Tortois is endangered so not allowed to capture and sell, but many places in Greece they are so abundandt that the local farmers kill them to avoid them eating their crops..
I don´t have any terraiums at the moment, but have had:
Sceloporus cyanogenis / Spiked Iguana
Anolis carolinensis / Green Anole
Iguana Iguana / Green Iguana
Chamaeleo calyptratus / Veiled chameleon
Yeah but I only kept species of the local variety, Desert tortoises (Gopherus agassizii) that other people gave me and such. They are threatened in parts of USA and Mexico as well; and as far as I remember the area where I lived is surrounded by a lot of wildland and people-free zones so all the animals released there should be doing allright.
I know a friend who still has a small population of these in his back yard and breeds them every year.
This thread really makes me miss them though, I plan on hunting for an eastern painted hatchling to raise until I go back to uni/possibly beyond.
Fuck the net, I'm getting my net and going turtling
but here's a tiny little garter snake I found mowing a lawn a few weeks back-
and here's a big 'ol bullfrog I caught just now!
fatass could hop 4' in a single bound, but let me get within 3' and hang out while I netted a couple mini sunfish. think's he's invisible or something...
That takes some balls imo as it's practically a chemical cocktail waiting to by IV'ed.
There are no venemous snakes in my area, just the same, I use a walking stick to flip the tin.
I'm pretty proficient with a snake hook anyways, it's rather safe for me, if I lived a couple states south I might consider adding a pull string to the tin to maximize my distance.
resubscribed