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HELP month old albino burmese python has green liquid when he was peeing

zabuza1314

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i was soaking my albino burmese python belial today, and i noticed when he was "peeing" or whatever before the poop, it was green and slimey, i dont know if its dangerous or not but it doesnt seem healthy to me, help me please, i need to know if this snake is going to be too much for me to handle while its growing up.
 
Can't really say, based on your description.
Is the question about whether the snake is going to be too much for you related to your anxiety, or the snake's growth/future size? (If the latter, you probably should have considered that before now)
 
i fully considered the size before i got it, it is a male so i wanted to not have one that was a monster. basically, the white urine, was covered with a sort of mucus, thats the closest thing i can describe it to, it was odd and ive never seen it before. i just dont want anything to be wrong with it and have it die on me. when my leopard gecko died a few years back i was heartbroken, i dont want to loose another animal because of something that could be avoidable, now he has a small kink in his tail, which ive read is sort of common for burms, and he doesnt have trouble pooping, but today when i saw the green fluid i pushed some of the other poop out and it seemed fine, it was light brown and smelled like, well poop. he is also really lethargic all the time. he doesnt move around much or anything, just sits under his heat lamp, which is running between 80-90 degrees. i keep it rather humid it there, between 50-75% every day. im feeding it every 3 to 4 days. as far as i can tell, im not mistreating the snake in any way, i just dont want anything to happen to him. i work at the petstore where i got him and the reason i took him in the first place was cause i couldnt get a boa, but im starting to think there may be some health problems and im not financially secure just yet and would hate to have to pay a large vet bill for anything.

thank you for any advice you can give.
 
The basics of what you described are not unusual; but, again, we cannot say much more than that based on the description. It is difficult to convey amount, consistency and color. Depending on how much green, how slimy,and the particular color; it could be normal, not unusual, or an indication of a problem. Observe it, and if you are concerned, take a sample to your vet.

(Personally, I wouldn't feed it that often; except, maybe, if you are feeding undersized prey)
 
okay, when he poops again if the same thing happens, ill try to snap a pic and see what i can come up with. now is him being really lazy normal too? he also doesnt really want to drink. he should be shedding soon and that may be a factor but his skin is starting to wrinkle. i have yet to see him drink from any stationary water dish, i know snakes get most of their hydration from their prey, but if hes under the lamp all day i figure he would drink atleast a little, now i dont stay up all night and watch him, but like i said i have yet to see him drink. anything seem unusual here?
 
The skin shouldn't be wrinkled, even when approaching a slough - I would start soaking him.
 
What kind of bedding are you keeping him on?

Did you mean, that the calcium he popped was/had green? I've seen snake poop calcium and it has green on it. I couldn't tell you exactly what causes it, but it could be the "quality" of food you feed him?
 
i have him on zoo med forrest floor bedding, which is mainly cypress mulch, and yeah the white stuff, im familiar with most parts of most snakes, but their poop, so excuse me if i sound... uneducated, but yes the white stuff that comes before the poop normally, that was covered in green, and it looked like where the ugly yellow color of the urine should be, was a dark green also, like mucus
 
Cypress mulch is pretty good at holding humidity, so the skin problem shouldn't be from that. No worries, take any of your wording as you "uneducated."

Does or has the snake had any respiratory problems.. Mucus, bubbles or wheezing?
 
the only time i noticed anything is when i put him in the water, it seems like sometimes he may not be holding his breath or accidentally inhales water, and it kinda just sound like s tuffy nose, but it doesnt last, if i were to take him out right now, he wouldnt sniffle, and he hasnt been showing any other signs of a respiratory infection either, like the looking towards the ceiling or anything, i can check his mouth tomorrow to see if its goopy or anything because i know that is a sign of a respiratory
 
My first assumption is an infection. Obviously most people are going to take him straight to the vet but that is not always possible.

I would say, keep his enclosure clean. Soak him a few times a week and if there is no improvement soon and you can afford to take him to the vet, do it. Good luck!
 
Personally, I'd just keep a small or medium water bowl(for now) and not mist him. In the past when I caught RI in the beginning, I'd keep the snake as warm as possible, small/medium water bowl with a bit of water(replace small amount as needed) and that worked for me.. But that's my personal experience.
 
alright, well i can also take him to the petstore where i work/volunteer, we have shots we give to most of our snakes for respiratory infections and it normally clears it up pretty fast
 
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