Paige n' James
New member
I agree!!!! Thank you so much Stephanie for stating exactly what I was trying to get across!!
Show me where it said the jungle was thin from breeding. The buyer was told that the jungle was thin, and not eating consistently (Yes, the opening post contradicts that; but the buyer recanted when questioned, and stated that she made a mistake when typing).Being thin from breeding is not an illness.
Guess I'm not done here, after all.....
Show me where it said the jungle was thin from breeding. The buyer was told that the jungle was thin, and not eating consistently (Yes, the opening post contradicts that; but the buyer recanted when questioned, and stated that she made a mistake when typing).
The point that seems to be lost here is that sepsis, renal failure, liver failure are not generally visually diagnosed by the average person. Buying ANY snake with disclosed problems carries an inherent risk, especially when one is not examining the snake in person, because there is ALWAYS the chance that things may be worse than they appear. A "swollen gland" is, IMO, as likely to be a sign of infection as some benign process that will just go away. And a local infection - left untreated - can easily become a systemic infection. That, more than anything else, is why reptiles with problems are best kept until the issues are resolved....and, if they are purchased, then the buyer takes on the responsibility of addressing the health concerns.
Mark was wrong with his diagnoses - that is unfortunate for the buyers; and subject to anybody's opinion whether he intentionally downplayed things (lied) or was simply mistaken. Given that I know more than a few experienced keepers that have misdiagnosed their animals, and underestimated the severity of problems (including mistaking sepsis for minor issues), I can only say what I have said all along - the animals should not have been sold/shipped.
Had the buyers taken the het albino to the vet in a timely manner, and contacted Mark with a legitimate diagnosis, I would probably be more accepting of the idea that some compensation is due. Instead, the buyer - perhaps surprised by the appearance of the snake - gave their own interpretation, stating that the snake needed surgery...yet still failed to bring the snake to the vet.
I didn't do necroscopies on the snakes. Both of the snakes were on very powerful medications. I don't know if that had something to do with it or not. In the end I don't think the hypo could breathe because of the pneumonia and with the het albino I guess it was just that the infection was too far along. She had that abscess for awhile, way before I bought her. The het albino was an awesome snake. I was going to keep her as a pet just out of respect for what she had been through. Some snakes don't have much of a personality but she definitely had some spunk and fire left. Joseph and I were really upset when she died.