ShadowSpark
New member
There's this guy who lives near me who's considered the local reptile "expert." He's the guy people tend to call if they find a rattlesnake or other unwanted reptile in their yard. He also does reptile education shows. Now, I've been to a couple of his shows, and most of his info is good, as are his recommendations for what to do if you encounter this snake or that snake.
The problem is, he invited us (my mom and me) over to see his collection, and when we went, we saw that he's displaying typical hoarder behavior. He had over 50 snakes, including several local venomous ones, most of them wild-caught (yes, he does have the licenses and permits), and the conditions they were being housed in were awful. The smaller snakes were in those plastic critter carrier things, all too small. When he was getting them out to show us, he would look into the bin and say "Oh, you're out of water." Every snake he got out to show us was aggressive, even the Ball Pythons, which are usually pretty calm.
The cages for the larger snakes had water, but there was more waste and bits of shed skin in there than substrate. It was all dry, and those cages can't have been cleaned in months. The snakes didn't look overly thin, but most of them had scars (which makes sense, as he told us he just drops a mouse into the tank and leaves it). Then there was his feeding room. It reminded me of those pictures you see of puppy mills, except with mice. Over-full cages, waste everywhere, dead mice just lying around at room temperature. It was disgusting, and it stank.
We went home, thoroughly scrubbed ourselves, and called animal control. They said they'd send someone over to check it out. This was maybe 7 or 8 months ago. A few weeks back, he offered to sell us a kingsnake that he'd bought at a show a few years ago. We weren't all that interested, but we figured it would be a good chance to see if animal control had done anything. So we went over. He had dropped his total snake count to around 30, but the conditions weren't any better. If anything, they were worse. The state of feeding room was nauseating. He'd had 2 4-year-old Hog Island boas the first time we'd come, and they weren't there this time. When I asked what happened to them, he nonchalantly told me that they'd gotten sick and died. Considering the lack of heating on the tank, I'm not that surprised.
We called animal control again, and they said they'd had someone go over and speak to the guy last time, to do it again would only be badgering him, and there was nothing else they could do. That feeding room should be reported to the CDC as a biohazard area. How many diseases do mice carry? And with piles of dead ones lying around...
I'm not happy, and I'm concerned for those snakes, but I don't know what else to do.
The problem is, he invited us (my mom and me) over to see his collection, and when we went, we saw that he's displaying typical hoarder behavior. He had over 50 snakes, including several local venomous ones, most of them wild-caught (yes, he does have the licenses and permits), and the conditions they were being housed in were awful. The smaller snakes were in those plastic critter carrier things, all too small. When he was getting them out to show us, he would look into the bin and say "Oh, you're out of water." Every snake he got out to show us was aggressive, even the Ball Pythons, which are usually pretty calm.
The cages for the larger snakes had water, but there was more waste and bits of shed skin in there than substrate. It was all dry, and those cages can't have been cleaned in months. The snakes didn't look overly thin, but most of them had scars (which makes sense, as he told us he just drops a mouse into the tank and leaves it). Then there was his feeding room. It reminded me of those pictures you see of puppy mills, except with mice. Over-full cages, waste everywhere, dead mice just lying around at room temperature. It was disgusting, and it stank.
We went home, thoroughly scrubbed ourselves, and called animal control. They said they'd send someone over to check it out. This was maybe 7 or 8 months ago. A few weeks back, he offered to sell us a kingsnake that he'd bought at a show a few years ago. We weren't all that interested, but we figured it would be a good chance to see if animal control had done anything. So we went over. He had dropped his total snake count to around 30, but the conditions weren't any better. If anything, they were worse. The state of feeding room was nauseating. He'd had 2 4-year-old Hog Island boas the first time we'd come, and they weren't there this time. When I asked what happened to them, he nonchalantly told me that they'd gotten sick and died. Considering the lack of heating on the tank, I'm not that surprised.
We called animal control again, and they said they'd had someone go over and speak to the guy last time, to do it again would only be badgering him, and there was nothing else they could do. That feeding room should be reported to the CDC as a biohazard area. How many diseases do mice carry? And with piles of dead ones lying around...
I'm not happy, and I'm concerned for those snakes, but I don't know what else to do.