~Just Curious~
Gotta ask!
Well I've finally gotten around to giving myself an avatar for this site and it occured to me that I haven't yet shared the snake pictured.
I've always admired old world rat snakes, but never had any real plans to get one for a while. This one was just so unique that I didn't want the opportunity to pass by!
In the begining, I called her Hsiu Mei (Supposedly a Mandarin girl's name meaning "Sophisticated eyebrows", I thought it was fitting since I love the markings on her face) but the family found it easier to just refer to her as "The Mandarin" since we only have the one, and somehow that got shortened to "The Mandy". I still like her original name best, but it looks like she's stuck with Mandy now. 
I really love how Mandy's yellow bleeds in to her black, I wonder if it isn't a locality thing, but so far all the mandarin folks I've spoken to say that cleancut patterns with as few aberrancies as possible are the most desirable. I agree that "perfect" mandarins are gorgeous, but I still like the "special" ones and am keeping my eyes peeled for a similar male. To each their own~
She likes it cool and loves to burrow in the substrate. My favorite thing about her is the way she wiggles her tail when I feed her. I have gophers and bulls, so I'm familiar with annoyed snakes using their tails to express themselves, but she doesn't "rattle her tail when grumpy" so much as "whip entire lower half around wildly when excited". When she's actually upset, she postures and strikes, her tail doesn't move at all, but when she smells a thawed mouse, her rear end goes nuts! It's too violent to be caudal luring and it gets more intense if her food moves any. Supposedly, it's not so uncommon. The vet says she's just so passionate about her food that she breaks out in dance!
I've only had this one individual for a year and information on them is scarce, so I'd love it if other mandarin keepers would put their animals and thoughts out there. Thank you~
(I have some recent photos of her in a natural background, but I can't seem to find the card they're on, so all these crappy pics I'm sharing are actually from a cleaning day in February. Sorry!)
I've always admired old world rat snakes, but never had any real plans to get one for a while. This one was just so unique that I didn't want the opportunity to pass by!
I really love how Mandy's yellow bleeds in to her black, I wonder if it isn't a locality thing, but so far all the mandarin folks I've spoken to say that cleancut patterns with as few aberrancies as possible are the most desirable. I agree that "perfect" mandarins are gorgeous, but I still like the "special" ones and am keeping my eyes peeled for a similar male. To each their own~
She likes it cool and loves to burrow in the substrate. My favorite thing about her is the way she wiggles her tail when I feed her. I have gophers and bulls, so I'm familiar with annoyed snakes using their tails to express themselves, but she doesn't "rattle her tail when grumpy" so much as "whip entire lower half around wildly when excited". When she's actually upset, she postures and strikes, her tail doesn't move at all, but when she smells a thawed mouse, her rear end goes nuts! It's too violent to be caudal luring and it gets more intense if her food moves any. Supposedly, it's not so uncommon. The vet says she's just so passionate about her food that she breaks out in dance!
I've only had this one individual for a year and information on them is scarce, so I'd love it if other mandarin keepers would put their animals and thoughts out there. Thank you~
(I have some recent photos of her in a natural background, but I can't seem to find the card they're on, so all these crappy pics I'm sharing are actually from a cleaning day in February. Sorry!)
