Rainbow boas have such interesting patterns. She’s stunning! Great job Rowena!
@snakemannn17444 ай бұрын
Yeahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh ,,,, What a beauty Lori ,,,
@dacisky4 ай бұрын
I always enjoy this sort of video.
@Eirinen_E344 ай бұрын
Beautiful rainbow Boa! 🌈
@LetsTalkHerps4 ай бұрын
She really looks gorgeous! And I love how they prefer to just guard the threshold.
@DominusTerrae4 ай бұрын
I wonder, whenever you need to move a snake out of their enclosure due to maintenance, do you always reinforce the use of the target by giving food? If so, what to do when this need arises more often than a feeding schedule would allow?
@LoriTorrini4 ай бұрын
When directing the snake with a target you want to maintain a continuous schedule of reinforcement so you reinforcer every time they move to or follow the target. This is usually with food but I have several snake who will also target to the door and out when freedom to roam is the reinforcer, in this case you would pair that activity with a different target than you use when food is the reinforcer. You can also easily do maintenance when the snake is in a hide or remove them in a shift box. For example, in this case from the video I could have just moved Rowena while she was in her humid hide, done maintenance and then put her with her humid hide back in her enclosure. I have several video demonstrating these situations and techniques in the Low Stress Management play list. kzbin.info/aero/PLNbZzsRecQ2aBdAVNhUvExneGlKmE3uRw&si=t9NdcXS4Qvg1wmvW
@theBOOTLEGG4 ай бұрын
Hi, Lori! I would love some advice if you don't mind giving it. I just adopted a 2-4 year old rainbow boa and I've had him for almost a month and he's refused to eat. He roams his enclosire regularly, his husbandry is good, he watches me from his hide sometimes, and he still refuses to eat. I did handle him a bit prematurely, but ive left him alone with no contact for two weeks and he is still not eating. Id appreciate your input before I take him to a vet
@LoriTorrini4 ай бұрын
Has he had his initial vet check yet? We have intake exams done on all new arrivals and once the vet clears them we start getting them settled in. With adults I do not worry about them eating right away unless they’re underweight. I offer food to let them know resources are available in this new place but many times adults in good body condition don’t eat until they feel safe and settled in. If he’s roaming excessively they do that when nervous and trying to escape to get back to their previous “home range” which is their familiar place they know. Once they feel secure and have accepted their new home territory their exact level should decrease as they will feel more content. It difficult for me to comment specifically without asking lots of details of you.
@theBOOTLEGG4 ай бұрын
@LoriTorrini @LoriTorrini I haven't taken him to a vet yet. I was using that as a last resort. But good to think it nay not be a big deal. He doesn't seem to roam excessively. He mostly roams at night once I've had the lights off for a minute and every once in a whole, he'll wake up during the day and poke his head out of his hide. At night he sits on his branch or will just meander around the tank. He doesn't look stressed at all to me (but I'm clearly no expert) and he's comfortable enough to drink water in the middle of the day and he's stopped for a drink as I've held him before and I don't think he's dehydrated or that I scare him, but I can definitely be assuming wrong.
@LoriTorrini4 ай бұрын
@@theBOOTLEGG Rainbow Boas typically hide most of the time and are active in the middle of the night. I always recommend a vet check for any new animal you add to your family to establish a baseline health status and maintain a relationship with your vet. Why would you say the vet is a last resort”? Annual wellness exams should be routine.
@theBOOTLEGG4 ай бұрын
@LoriTorrini because I was hoping that nothing is "wrong" with him, but I did not consider using the vet if he was fine. I didn't consider annual checks.