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Ball Python escapes and survives alone in house with 10 cats. Why can't everyone have a real cage?
http://ydr.inyork.com/ci_11792630
Reggie the snake survives ordeal
By TERESA MCMINN
For the Daily Record/Sunday News
Posted: 02/26/2009 04:41:18 PM EST
Reggie the ball python is at home in North Codorus Township recovering after 12 stitches were required to repair his shredded skin. He was injured trying to escape his cage and then was attacked by the Jacobs family's pet cats. (submitted)It is a miracle that a pet python is alive after nearly skinning itself during an attempted escape and then being mauled by a gang of cats.
That's what Jodi Jacobs said of Reggie, her 8-year-old son Ben's pet snake.
"It was his Christmas present," she said of the ball python that's less than a year old and about 11/2 feet long.
About three weeks ago, Reggie apparently crawled through an opening in the top of his cage, and in the process, caught and ripped his skin.
"He peeled himself like a banana," Jacobs said. The snake's colorful skin of gray and brown was torn and exposed its "red meat," she said.
Jacobs said nobody was at the family's North Codorus Township home when this happened.
Except for their 10 cats.
"They decided to play with him," Jacobs said. "The cats bit his jaw ... He has cat bites all down his body."
Ben found Reggie balled up in the bathtub. The family doesn't know if the snake crawled there or was dragged by the cats.
Jacobs said she cleaned the snake and treated it with some topical medication for humans.
The next day, she took Reggie to Animal Emergency & Referral Center of York in Spring Garden Township. Center owner and medical director Shaka Monroe operated on the snake, which required about a dozen stitches.
"He looks like he has his head sewn back on," Jacobs said. She's amazed Monroe was able to save the reptile. "I am just so happy."
Since the surgery, Reggie hasn't been able to eat a full-size mouse because
the stitches around his neck won't allow for his head to expand to swallow a rodent, she said.
"We tried a baby mouse, and that was still difficult," Jacobs said. "But ... (Reggie) is growing despite his tragedy."
However, the snake isn't out of the woods yet, said Katina Palm, practice manager at the animal emergency center.
"It's too soon to say if he'll make a full recovery," she said of Reggie, who is back at home. "He had several lacerations ... his muscles were exposed ... It's a slow healing process."
Palm said the center does not specialize in exotic pet medicine.
Palm also said when an animal like Reggie is hurt, its owner should immediately call a veterinarian rather than try to treat the pet at home.
Monroe on Thursday was hopeful Reggie would recover.
"It would be an awesome thing," he said.
http://ydr.inyork.com/ci_11792630