Colombian Red Tail- Friend Needs some Help...

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo

Tylervsmith

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
Mar 4, 2007
932
0
0
Kansas, USA
My Friend Is looking into a nice BCI from Colombia.

Need Some help here as im not an expert on boids:(:grinno:

Things He needs help with:
  • Proper Food Size for Young & Adult... P/K..
  • Proper Humidity
  • Ways to keep humdity in large enclosure.
  • Enclosure size for young to feel safe.
  • How large of water dish.
  • Temp. Of Hot Spot.
  • Temp. Of Cool Side.
  • Personal Experience.
  • Miscellaneous.

And to WALLS... What was your Female again, Bci or Bcc?


Thanks All!
 
Boas are cool. I actually held a BCI for a couple years for an acquaintance who was in jail, and I really enjoyed the snake.

Proper Food Size for Young & Adult... P/K.. - a baby should be able to take an adult mouse, and they're pretty easy to get on prekilled/frozen-thawed.
Proper Humidity - not really high, 60% or so. Too dry = bad sheds.
Ways to keep humdity in large enclosure - stay away from aquariums with open/screen tops. Go with a DIY enclosure or maybe one of those prefab plastic ones by boaphile plastics or Vision. If it has to be an aquarium (ie it's already bought) give the boa a humid hide box, something like a rubbermaid container with the top on and an opening cut in a side, with damp paper towel inside.
Enclosure size for young to feel safe - that doesn't seem to be as much of an issue as it can be with ball/royal pythons for example. A smaller enclosure is fine for the young boa but I don't think it's necessary; it will make it easier for the snake to find food if you're not tong-feeding.
How large of water dish - I always go with something big enough for the snake to soak but some don't. Something heavy to avoid tipping.
Temp. Of Hot Spot / Temp. Of Cool Side - I went with mid-90s on the hot end and mid-70s on the cool end. I found if the cool end was any lower the snake never went there, ditto if the warm end went over 100. Hides on both ends.
Personal Experience - the boa I was keeping didn't have as strong a feeding response as other snakes I've kept (granted those "other snakes" were retics, burm, and kingsnake). It was a very calm snake, not jumpy/nervous at all. By the time it reached 5' long it was eating F/T adult rats without trouble. It was near 9' when I gave it back and eating 2 large rats weekly; I never felt the need to move up to larger prey like rabbits, chickens, or guinea pigs but that's just personal preference on my part I guess, I just feel feeding 2 smaller prey is preferable to one large prey item. It was an excellent shedder, especially compared to the retics I've had. You didn't mention substrate, I used cypress mulch for most of my herps and it worked well for the boa. The boa wasn't agressive at all, never struck, but then again neither were my pythons.
 
CTU2fan;1562307; said:
Boas are cool. I actually held a BCI for a couple years for an acquaintance who was in jail, and I really enjoyed the snake.

Proper Food Size for Young & Adult... P/K.. - a baby should be able to take an adult mouse, and they're pretty easy to get on prekilled/frozen-thawed.
Proper Humidity - not really high, 60% or so. Too dry = bad sheds.
Ways to keep humdity in large enclosure - stay away from aquariums with open/screen tops. Go with a DIY enclosure or maybe one of those prefab plastic ones by boaphile plastics or Vision. If it has to be an aquarium (ie it's already bought) give the boa a humid hide box, something like a rubbermaid container with the top on and an opening cut in a side, with damp paper towel inside.
Enclosure size for young to feel safe - that doesn't seem to be as much of an issue as it can be with ball/royal pythons for example. A smaller enclosure is fine for the young boa but I don't think it's necessary; it will make it easier for the snake to find food if you're not tong-feeding.
How large of water dish - I always go with something big enough for the snake to soak but some don't. Something heavy to avoid tipping.
Temp. Of Hot Spot / Temp. Of Cool Side - I went with mid-90s on the hot end and mid-70s on the cool end. I found if the cool end was any lower the snake never went there, ditto if the warm end went over 100. Hides on both ends.
Personal Experience - the boa I was keeping didn't have as strong a feeding response as other snakes I've kept (granted those "other snakes" were retics, burm, and kingsnake). It was a very calm snake, not jumpy/nervous at all. By the time it reached 5' long it was eating F/T adult rats without trouble. It was near 9' when I gave it back and eating 2 large rats weekly; I never felt the need to move up to larger prey like rabbits, chickens, or guinea pigs but that's just personal preference on my part I guess, I just feel feeding 2 smaller prey is preferable to one large prey item. It was an excellent shedder, especially compared to the retics I've had. You didn't mention substrate, I used cypress mulch for most of my herps and it worked well for the boa. The boa wasn't agressive at all, never struck, but then again neither were my pythons.


I pretty much agree with all this.......The only thing that stuck out for me is that a baby boa would not be able to eat a full grown mouse, you just have to start smaller and work your way up as they grow........otherwise that's pretty good info :thumbsup: ..........
 
I start mine out on day old pinky rats. I prefer not to mess with mice unless I have to. Then you don't have to worry about changing them over to rats later. And when snakes are young they do better in a smaller enclosure. They feel more secure in a smaller cage. I have seen many people put there neonates in a DIY cage that is big enough for an adult snake. And the snakes just don't tend to do aswell. They become stressed and often don't eat. A good cheap cage to start is a clear rubber maid shoe/sweater box. Drill some holes for ventilation. Throw down some aspen bedding, water dish and a couple of hides. Get an under the tank heater and monitor the temps.
 
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