Seamus Haley
Big Game Hunter
Show me some pinhead balls.......
I did spend a couple minutes wandering around google image searches but it appears people don't want to post pics of anything fed to breeding size in two years, I don't have any pinheaded animals myself so I guess I'm just going to have to say... I've seen them a few times, I suspect you have as well and just don't want to admit it at this point. Maybe someone else will read the thread to this point and offer their views, although the way we've all been responding since Btaylor there decided to crawl up Beard's butt I wouldn't blame them for just closing the thread.
Your damn right I'll argue bp's won't feed every time food is offered. If that was the case - nobody would have problems getting wc bp's to eat.
You really didn't read anything I wrote, did you? Try the part in bold here... WHEN a ball python is in such a condition as to accept food, they eat because food is present, not because they are specifically "hungry" I am not arguing that balls are strong feeders or will blow up the way burms frequently do... What I am saying is that you are taking an animal that really has a year long cycle to the strength of their feeding responses and is built in such a way as to bulk up fairly quickly when food is avaliable and drop weight fairly slowly when it is not. This means that when it's the ideal time to put on weight, initially healthy animals will POUND food and bulk up fairly quickly... they are built to take large and fairly frequent meals in order to replace lost weight. However I also contend that this can be abused by someone choosing to offer food. Seriously, when your balls are on a five day feeding schedule, I challenge you to feed every three for a few weeks. I doubt they will take *every* prey item offered but would wager you could easily see a 25-30% increase in the mass of prey accepted.
Once again... You have both stated that you feed with decent frequency to build up and maintain a decent weight, but rejected the idea of a MORE frequent feeding schedule. Why would you reject the idea of more frequent feedings if it didn't have potentially negative effects on the animal's health? All I am stating is that is IS a possibility to overfeed a ball python, I have seen the results myself. I'm not going to say it's a common problem and agree fully that underweight animals are far more likely and should not be advertised when the condition is obviously poor but simply because an alternative scenario is unlikely does not make it an impossibility.