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bkhuff1s
06-28-2010, 04:12 PM
Today I got home to see find a still born, so I'm not sure when it came out. Do they come out at the same time as the others?

guidofatherof5
06-28-2010, 04:16 PM
Usually they are just part of the delivery time. I've had them come first,middle and end of deliveries.
Sorry to hear about your loss.

Mommy2many
06-28-2010, 04:23 PM
Sorry to hear of your loss.

bkhuff1s
06-28-2010, 04:29 PM
Right now she looks like she'll shed in a couple of days, so I was confused. She doesn't appear to be having contractions at the moment.

sirtalis01
06-28-2010, 05:21 PM
O that sucks...my female melanistic just had 13 jellys and 5 still borns:confused::(:(:(..

mtolypetsupply
06-28-2010, 05:56 PM
Sorry for your losses. Just because one appears stillborn, however, doesn't mean they really are. We thought one was, s/he was all kinked, yolk still attached, etc. Woody, as we call him, is doing fine for now. IMO , give it time, and if it gets out of the sac, then try to help it live. Sometimes, the little scrubs will surprise you. :)

guidofatherof5
06-28-2010, 06:01 PM
O that sucks...my female melanistic just had 13 jellys and 5 still borns:confused::(:(:(..

Very sorry to hear about your loss, Julio.

bkhuff1s
06-28-2010, 07:14 PM
I was assuming it was dead, because it smelled like it'd been born a day or two ago, which is why I'm confused as to what's going on with her

sirtalis01
06-28-2010, 07:42 PM
Very sorry to hear about your loss, Julio.

thanks Steve....im still waiting for the Big Radix you send me to give birth...i need to post pix of all my new babys:D

guidofatherof5
06-28-2010, 08:03 PM
thanks Steve....im still waiting for the Big Radix you send me to give birth...i need to post pix of all my new babys:D

Those radixes do get big with great attitudes.:)

bkhuff1s
07-03-2010, 12:18 PM
I'd been waiting on my female to shed hoping to see more babies. Came home from work, and another still born.... I looked at this one a little closer and it looked like it's head had been mushed against something. I was afraid she might be compacted, since the other one was born around a week ago. She still has that obvious bulge so I'm thinking there more to come. Hopefully live ones.

guidofatherof5
07-03-2010, 02:52 PM
I had I female(Speckle) this year that passed stillborns for a month after delivering. She was back to eating and acting normal the whole time. If she would have delivered all of them alive she would have had 44 babies. The ones that lived are all doing fine.
It's a shame when some of them don't make it but there's usually a good reason for it.

bkhuff1s
07-08-2010, 01:46 PM
Another still born arrived today...

bkhuff1s
07-08-2010, 01:46 PM
Any idea on what causes this? Low temps?

mtolypetsupply
07-08-2010, 01:49 PM
I was assuming it was dead, because it smelled like it'd been born a day or two ago, which is why I'm confused as to what's going on with her


Sorry for your loss. Didn't know about the aroma. Sorry if I sounded insensitive.

Just for informative purposes, basking light or belly heat? Some have reported differences between the two regarding kinks, still borns, etc.

bkhuff1s
07-08-2010, 01:52 PM
belly

bkhuff1s
07-08-2010, 01:52 PM
I just want to know what's causing this. Three still borns and about as many jellies

guidofatherof5
07-08-2010, 03:18 PM
It could be a lot of factors. Most of which would be out of your control.
These things just happen. I have for many years have been looking for any studies on this phenomenon but as of yet haven't found any.

bkhuff1s
07-08-2010, 09:17 PM
Well Steve, I appreciate your input.
It's just frustrating that's all.
It was her first time in all fairness to her. She did grow about 6-8 inches, no lie. She hadn't grown at all in about a year, so I assumed she was ready, I guess I was wrong.

guidofatherof5
07-08-2010, 09:55 PM
Well Steve, I appreciate your input.
It's just frustrating that's all.
It was her first time in all fairness to her. She did grow about 6-8 inches, no lie. She hadn't grown at all in about a year, so I assumed she was ready, I guess I was wrong.

With what little is know about first time breeders, what happened may be more of a norm. Kind of like a learning process, developmentally.
It sounds like you are still blaming yourself. I don't think there is anything you could have done to stop this from happening.
Long time breeders had snakes dump all jellies and it was nothing they did to cause the problem. Sometimes things just don't turn out the way we think they should.
Losing my girl Rita this year was a complete shock but not one I could have predicted or prevented. I'm still saddened by the ordeal but don't think it was anything I did. This whole keeping/breeding thing we do comes with risks and a lot of unknowns.

bkhuff1s
07-08-2010, 10:32 PM
Well like I said before I appreciate your understanding. She ate for the first time in a month today. So that's a move in the right direction. Judging by sizes, next year she will be the only positive breeder, since the other three females I own are at her pre-bred size.

ConcinusMan
07-15-2010, 08:11 PM
It could be a lot of factors. Most of which would be out of your control.
These things just happen. I have for many years have been looking for any studies on this phenomenon but as of yet haven't found any.

May or may not be out of anyone's control. You would have to know the cause in order to rule on that but consider this: we are breeding generations and artificially selecting snakes for certain traits. If a snake was that poor at reproducing in the wild, guess what happens? The snakes with those genes and poor reproduction don't survive to pass their genes on. nature doesn't coddle the one or two survivors out a litter of garbage and see to it that they breed in the future, let alone breed the siblings together later, and yet it's common practice with CB morphs.

I've bred wild caught snakes plenty of times, even from the same pair over many years, and never saw a slug. A few stillborns, but never slugs. Heck, I don't even know what they look like. Now just for saying all that, watch my girls all "slug out":p

Just saying. I could probably go catch a couple of dozen gravid females right now, and none of them would have such miserable litters and yet it seems all to common around the forum so there has to be something we're doing, that is not happening in nature. Nobody wants to be blamed, but the cause just might be all of us, and everything we do from selective breeding to genetics, to brumating conditions, to husbandry during pregnancy. I never use belly heat for garters, especially preggo one's. The snakes are just stupid enough to lay on hot surfaces and burn themselves, then they're stupid enough to overheat their eggs inside. Bottom heat does have the potential to cause problems. Excessive heat and failure to cool down at night is more likely to cause reproductive failure than temperatures that are too cool.

I don't want everybody getting all defensive and calling hogwash and getting ticked off at me. Just trying throw out some ideas that nobody seems to even consider. I can't prove any of this but there is a lot of slugs and poor litters with some morphs, and CB snakes (generations far removed from the wild and selected) in general it seems and you also can't prove that some of the things I said are NOT a contributing factor.

With all that said, I'm sorry it didn't work out and like Steve said, there's likely nothing you specifically did wrong. There's too many factors that alone, or in combination, that can cause this. It sounds like she'll be passing decomposing babies for a while so brace yourself for that. She could just turn right around and give a nice big healthy litter next year.

Hollis_Steed
07-15-2010, 08:42 PM
May or may not be out of anyone's control. You would have to know the cause in order to rule on that but consider this: we are breeding generations and artificially selecting snakes for certain traits. If a snake was that poor at reproducing in the wild, guess what happens? The snakes with those genes and poor reproduction don't survive to pass their genes on. nature doesn't coddle the one or two survivors out a litter of garbage and see to it that they breed in the future, let alone breed the siblings together later, and yet it's common practice with CB morphs.

I've bred wild caught snakes plenty of times, even from the same pair over many years, and never saw a slug. A few stillborns, but never slugs. Heck, I don't even know what they look like. Now just for saying all that, watch my girls all "slug out":p

Just saying. I could probably go catch a couple of dozen gravid females right now, and none of them would have such miserable litters and yet it seems all to common around the forum so there has to be something we're doing, that is not happening in nature. Nobody wants to be blamed, but the cause just might be all of us, and everything we do from selective breeding to genetics, to brumating conditions, to husbandry during pregnancy. I never use belly heat for garters, especially preggo one's. The snakes are just stupid enough to lay on hot surfaces and burn themselves, then they're stupid enough to overheat their eggs inside. Bottom heat does have the potential to cause problems. Excessive heat and failure to cool down at night is more likely to cause reproductive failure than temperatures that are too cool.

I don't want everybody getting all defensive and calling hogwash and getting ticked off at me. Just trying throw out some ideas that nobody seems to even consider. I can't prove any of this but there is a lot of slugs and poor litters with some morphs, and CB snakes (generations far removed from the wild and selected) in general it seems and you also can't prove that some of the things I said are NOT a contributing factor.

With all that said, I'm sorry it didn't work out and like Steve said, there's likely nothing you specifically did wrong. There's too many factors that alone, or in combination, that can cause this. It sounds like she'll be passing decomposing babies for a while so brace yourself for that. She could just turn right around and give a nice big healthy litter next year.

I for one think you're probably getting darn close to some real truth here. Makes sense to think that with all of the jelly beans, slugs, birth defects, and the like, which most of the breeders of cb garters seem to see quite a bit of, it is reasonable to think we might not know as much as Mother Nature. The close inbreeding for certain desirable traits coupled with the "unnatural" conditions that our snakes are living under must certainly increase, or at least contribute to the "unnatural" offspring that we see.
Like I said, I think you're on to something here!

ConcinusMan
07-15-2010, 08:56 PM
Well thanks. Seems that everyone else, especially the leading breeders of new morphs, get defensive if I even mention it and bombard me with other possible causes. I keep hearing people saying T.s. concinnus have small litters but that's coming from concinnus that are many generations removed (and even possibly at some point even possibly got crossed with infernalis)

I've never had less than 23 offspring, and even once had 54, coming from WC (but captive bred) parents, brumated for 4 months at 45-50 degrees F so I don't know what to say about their small litters.

bkhuff1s
07-15-2010, 09:08 PM
These two out of my collection are WC, and unrelated. I'm wondering if heat was the problem