!Calling all Parents that have Reptiles! - FaunaClassifieds
FaunaClassifieds  
  Tired of those Google and InfoLink ads? Upgrade Your Membership!
  Inside FaunaClassifieds » Photo Gallery  
 

Go Back   FaunaClassifieds > Reptile & Amphibian - General Discussion Forums > General Herp Talk

Notices

General Herp Talk Can't figure out where to post down in the other discussion forums? Too many options and too complicated? Well post your herp related messages here and to heck with it.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 03-10-2015, 11:26 PM   #1
Night10gail
!Calling all Parents that have Reptiles!

So my husband and I have officially started family planning. All of this year (2015) is our prep time before we actually start trying. So this year is all about gathering baby supplies, reading parenting books, meeting with doctors, getting some health things in line, getting use to the new insurance, paying off some bills, building better credit, and finishing reptile setups. This year is all about making some necessary changes and learning as much as we can. I know during pregnancy things will get hard for me to do in the last trimester and perhaps even from the beginning, as all the woman in my family have had bad morning sickness. Then postpartum there will be the extra chaos of caring for an infant that will later turn into chasing around a toddler that may be hard to entertain.

I want to hear from parents that have reptiles how you kept up with your normal things like cooking, cleaning, as well as your reptiles' care while handling morning sickness, being off balance in the 3rd trimester and caring for a child. Any tips, tricks, suggestions?

My husband is on board with helping me with MY reptiles but he doesn't know too much about them as I'm the only reptile person in either side of the family. My best friend knows quite a deal about each of my animals and has already volunteered to help out. I have specific methods to meet each animal's individual personality, preferences, and needs. I am writing up a go to care manual in case we use a pet sitter at any point, and so my husband can get answers to questions he has while taking care of the reptiles while I'm out of the house. I think I should note that I don't use basic caging or rack systems; I have mainly display caging and that I know can make care harder for myself or a caretaker. I find display caging adds an element of joy to keeping reptiles for me and I don't want to give that up unless for emergency.

I don't have a spare room I can move all the reptiles to, so I'm switching the large snakes and pricier reptiles to cages with locks to prevent kids from getting in at them or letting them escape. I figured at some point during pregnancy I'm going to need to sit on a stool and use a snake hook to remove the snakes in the lower cages and to do basic maintenance in those cages.
 
Old 03-18-2015, 01:01 AM   #2
Helenthereef
Well, I'm not a parent, but I do travel a lot and have to leave my snakes alone for periods of time, so maybe this one little tip might be of interest:

To cut down on the need for regular water bowl changes - as well as their regular bathing /drinking bowls, get some bird drinkers - just plastic domes with bowls that automatically refill the bowl. I find that the bowl is too small for my snakes to actually climb in and mess up, but big enough for them to get their heads in for a drink.

I got mine at a regular pet store, and they have solved the headache of leaving the water bowls a few more days between changes than normal.
 
Old 04-09-2015, 08:17 PM   #3
CreatureFreak
I am pregnant now expecting a second child. I work six days a week at two jobs so taking care of the animals as well as having free time is a challenge! Usually if I'm at work and my boyfriend is home I give him tasks to do with the snakes or lizards. He does a handful each day so when I come home I help take care of any sick animals and other feedings for around an hour.
We usually try to do feedings every three days or so in order not to get overwhelmed with tasks. Use paper towel bedding, it's alot cleaner and quicker to change. If you feel you don't have enough time for all your animals, sell some in order to devote enough attention to the ones you have. On my ONE day off I try to set aside at least an hour if not more for any other building, reorganizing tasks, problem animals etc. plan ahead early in the week to do fun things with your significant other or spouse and sleep in when you can, because sleep is going to become non-existant for a while!
-Jordyn
 
Old 04-09-2015, 08:24 PM   #4
CreatureFreak
My boyfriend doesn't know alot about animals either. After showing him what to do several times he will understand it. Just make sure to stress hygine procedures and if he's not sure of something don't make him try it without you there. Show your husband how to feed the reptiles and make charts. This helps alot with keeping track of things for us. All the snakes have ID numbers and descriptions of their markings along with their information, so we don't get them mixed up.
I favor display systems too, but am currently switching to a rack system for now with a rotation on fancy cages for the bigger animals. It has become to overwhelming to clean all the cages, so I would suggest at least getting a small rack even if it isn't long term, just for when the baby arrives. My daughter loves playing with the animals and at 1 1/2 already knows how to open cages very quickly and sneakily, so the rack system will be a better fit to keep the animals safe from her wandering hands!
 
Old 04-09-2015, 11:34 PM   #5
Night10gail
Jordyn Pietroske thanks for all the in put. My husband already knows each animal by name and which ones are most likely to bite you if you're not careful enough. Each animal has been introduced to him so they're comfortable being handled by him. My husband knows I feed them in separate tubs, which day I feed them, how each prefers their mouse, and how I de-chlorinate my water. He's never done it or had me show him but I'm sure he's gotten the gist by now since I'm always talking about my pets and he's watched me feed them on multiple occasions. It's a good starting ground at least. I'm typing up a go to care sheet he can reference if he forgets which animal gets what while I'm not at home or reachable via phone. Maybe I'll put him in charge mostly of the feeder insects as they require a little more time than my reptiles believe it or not. Gotta pick out the dead mealworms and not forget to give them a dried off carrot for water or the whole colony will spoil.

I actually find substrate quicker and easier to clean than paper towel. I can never wait until the quarantine period is over so I can stop using paper towels and switch to a pretty setup. With paper towels I'd have to take EVERYTHING out of the cage to roll up the paper towel just to find they some how managed to get poop stuck on the bottom of the cage anyway, so then I have to scrub that up with a wet paper towel. With substrate I hold the animal in one hand, pick up the poop in the other hand, throw away the soiled substrate and throw a fist full of fresh substrate over the bare spot. Makes for some vacuuming though, but eh. The substrate soaks up most of the moisture confining it to one spot and preventing the animal from smearing it on themselves.

I'd think racks would be easier for a toddler to open. My husband can't even get the screen clips off my tanks. Now I'm sure one of those cages with the sliding screen tops, or a sliding front door cage or bolted cage a toddler would figure out quick. That's why I'm putting key locks on my Exo Terra terrariums so they can't be pulled open. I'm also planing to really reinforcing to not touch without asking.
 
Old 04-10-2015, 02:36 AM   #6
CreatureFreak
Looks like you already have a pretty good handle on things! Just remember the amount of easy work now will be very tiring in later months of pregnancy and the more feedings can be done by other people/ your husband the better. Mostly because you're not going to want to keep bending into the tank/ transferring into the feeding tub. At six months along I'm doing it now and it's a bit annoying, but I'm sure you know, still enjoyable.
The only other thing I can say is the better detailed your care sheets are the better! I like to keep track of the exact date every animal eats and how much so (others) know how much to feed and if that animal can be skipped for a feeding, plus then I know which animals are at risk for losing weight or might be sick. You may be right about the rubs except that I plan on having some higher up ones. Yup the sliding lid is the problem! They're very good for the snakes but not so much for toddlers. Husband proof clips haha. Yeah clips sometimes like to attack fingers. My daughter understands she's not supposed to touch and she's very smart but the attraction and curiosity of the animals doesn't stop her from suddenly ripping a lid off when i grad a kleenex from the bathroom or something. Only happened once! Now she can't be in the room for even 30 seconds alone haha! She loves the bearded dragon so much. Do you breed your animals or just collect?
 
Old 04-10-2015, 11:58 AM   #7
AbsoluteApril
For tracking, you might want to check out iherp.com, it's an online tracking system where you set up your animals and keep track online of who fed, what they ate, shed, cleaned, etc and using the 'dashboard' function it will show you how long ago someone ate so you (or your husband/bfs) can easily see who needs to be fed next. Not sure if it's easier or more time consuming than keeping paper charts but personally I prefer it over all those spiral bound notebooks I used to have.
Good luck!!
 
Old 04-10-2015, 07:32 PM   #8
nickolasanastasiou
I use Excel since I already have the MS Office suite.
 
Old 04-10-2015, 07:59 PM   #9
Dahliasmom2012
I have a 3 year old daughter and a husband who thinks washing dishes is all he ever needs to do and he will get extra points if I see him doing them when I get home. *insert eyeroll*
You learn to prioritize and cut corners. Clutter will happen. It goes with the best childhoods.
My snakes are in tanks with clips and velcro. Dahlia leaves them be but she will open the bird cage and let the cockatiels out if we don't keep an eye on her and she has taken it upon herself to open and feed my pet gerbils. Thankfully she drops the lid back after and so far no escapes.
Having someone else that can help with cleaning and feeding will be a huge help. I forced my husband home twice during my labor (it was a loooooong labor)to feed my lorikeet. When I got home with her we had nursing problems and I was an exhausted mess that was either nursing, pumping or washing out everything only to start over. I wouldn't have been coherent in those days enough to do much else. If not for the husband doing some critter care I would have probably stuck a gerbil in the birds bowl and a bottle in a beak.
 
Old 04-14-2015, 12:01 PM   #10
Night10gail
Jordyn I don't breed my animals. They're just a small collection of very varied pets and I want to do educational show for kids with them. I may breed a few in the future but nothing is decided there.

Yup seen what my friend's toddler does in 30sec of her mom turning around. That's why I opted for locks so there's no way those doors or coming off/opening. LOL. Gonna have bubble wrap at the ready if my kid(s) goes through a throwing everything phase. I'm also exploring having a baby gate custom made to actually gate off the entire reptile wall so the kid(s) can't even get at the cages. I already moved some equipment into one of those plastic draw units because my friend's toddler loved shaking my vitamin powder and carrying around the tongs.
 

Join now to reply to this thread or open new ones for your questions & comments! FaunaClassifieds.com is the largest online community about Reptile & Amphibians, Snakes, Lizards and number one classifieds service with thousands of ads to look for. Registration is open to everyone and FREE. Click Here to Register!

 
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Calling all FireBellys BP's TheFragginDragon Ball Pythons Discussion Forum 31 08-14-2012 01:41 PM
Calling all stalkers! Tere Salazar Ball Pythons Discussion Forum 19 04-29-2011 08:37 AM
Calling all electrical ppl LeosForLess Geckos Discussion Forum 6 02-03-2006 11:41 AM


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:25 PM.







Fauna Top Sites


Powered by vBulletin® Version
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Page generated in 0.07595706 seconds with 10 queries
Content copyrighted ©2002-2022, FaunaClassifieds, LLC