Trefenwyd said:
Currently they're being housed in a 20 gallon tank. We're using some kind of snake-safe Aspen, I think. Large water dish, hiding cave, things to climb on.
So, they are being housed together? Not the best way to get them started, but not impossible, either. More on this at the end.
Some kind of snake-safe aspen,
you think. Accepting that there could be a variety of reasons that you might not know what you are using for substrate, I will reserve comment until you can be certain...aspen is a perfectly acceptable option, however.
We're keeping the temperature lower because we were told that they're temperature sensitive. I believe we have it at about 84 in their tank at the moment.
hmmm...ok, we'll guess that it is about 84 in their tank. A good temp for dums, in fact, but is that a consistent and/or constant temp? Is one side warmer than the other? If you are using a light or CHE for heat, is it turned off at night (if so, what are the night time temps). If you are using any type of "spot heating" (light, CHE, UTH, etc), what are the temps at the warmest and coolest spots?
I've tried live mice pinkies and fuzzies, live rat pinkies, f/t of all three of those things. I've tried feeding them in their tank, outside their tank, in the evening, after they've started hunting, if they look like they're waiting for food, by holding it right in front of their face for ten minutes or so, wiggling it, leaving it with them over night, tapping them with it... As far as forcing, I've tried just opening their mouth and putting the prey item just inside to see if they'd wrap around it...
Scrap the mouse pinkies and fuzzies...live rat pinks sometimes work, but are not your best option. Offer a small live mouse (anything from a medium sized hopper to a small adult will work, just don't go with a real big one). This was one of the major obstacles I have faced with breeding dums - I don't like feeding live, and don't breed my own rodents. Get them started first, once they are feeding regularly, it isn't that big a deal to switch them...the key is to get them feeding regularly.
Currently what I have to do - every week - is put the f/t fuzzy in their mouth and push it to the jawline. From there on they'll finish the work, but this is after much coaxing. They still have NEVER struck at anything, and they're not acting like it's going to happen anytime soon.
You don't need to assist feed every week - in fact, it is stressful to the snake...let that wait until it is necessary.
SO. Check your temps & make sure everything is as it should be (don't think, be sure). Leave them alone for a week - don't mess with them, unless it is absolutely necessary...and in a 20 long, that shouldn't happen in a week. Spot clean the tank, as needed, but leave them alone. make a divider (cardboard will do) to split the tank in half - use it when you offer the live mice after a week, with one snake on either side. Do not leave the mice unattended with your snakes (they like to bite/chew on dum tail tips)