Boa vs. Python
February 8th, 2010Grow Your Network With Kaazi.com
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IMDB rating: 2.90 Plot: After an overly ambitious businessman transports an 80-foot python to the United States, the beast escapes and starts to leave behind a trail of human victims. An FBI agent and a snake specialist come up with a plot to combat the creature by pitting it against a bioengineered, 70-foot boa constrictor. It’s two great snakes that snake great together! |
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Actors: Hewlett David,Woller Kirk B.R.,Kendrick Adam,Furst Griff,Naidenov Ivo,Sheffey George R.,Srebrev Atanas,Anichkin Harry,Rank Jeff,Blatechki Assen,Binev Velizar,Talkington Jonas,Action,Comedy,Sci-Fi,Thriller,Horror,
what is easier to breed boas or ball pythons?
red tail boas vs. ball pythons
Ball python’s are a little more harder because you have to incubate the eggs. You have a lot of things that you have to look out for…egg temperatures ranging from 88 to 90 degrees. The substrate for the eggs,maintaining humidity, and making sure the eggs dont go bad. So its a lot more work, now the red tail boas have live offspring. Most of the work is done by the mom and how you properly take care of it while being gravid. The temperatures would need to be the same, and most of the time the females would stop eating. Now a huge difference that I know is the hatchling rate. Ball pythons lay up to 4-8 probably can lay a few more but not many(depending on the size of your female). Now boas can have 6-55 live young, I have even heard of 65 but there was no proof of it. Good luck!
| Jul 10, 2009
pythons are easier telling for my experience
Iman | Jul 09, 2009
both have pros and cons, the main being boas have live young and with balls the eggs need to be incubated.
Joe | Jul 09, 2009
i would suggest doing the boas because you can sell them for a lot more money than a ball.
Matthew | Jul 09, 2009
I wouldn’t go with either, they are both some of the most common snakes out there. The two local her rescues are full of them, because they are so plentiful and no one wants them.
If you really want to breed something, make sure there is a market for the babies. You don’t want to be stuck with a bunch of babies to feed that no one wants, that you have to sell cheap to any old crappy pet store that will take them.
Get involved in your local reptile community/clubs/societies/rescues, find out what there is a niche for. I know if anyone were to breed mandarin rat snakes here, there would be homes for all the babies because no one else is breeding them right now, and they’re unusual.
Breeding is a lot of work either way, and it’s not something I would ever do. I’ve had to help friends re-home reptiles in the past, finding good homes with people who know what they’re doing is stressful. Sometimes you can’t be picky, and to hear that one skink I helped place now has mouth rot that’s going untreated is HEARTBREAKING.
sensor girl | Jul 10, 2009

