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Thread: Cat food???

  1. #11
    Domos Ophiusa gregmonsta's Avatar
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    Re: Cat food???

    I've frozen earthworms before ... defrosted in cold water they turned out just fine
    Keeping - 'Florida blue' sirtalis, concinnus, infernalis, parietalis, radix, marcianus and ocellatus.

  2. #12
    Juvenile snake DrKate's Avatar
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    Re: Cat food???

    Thanks for the info, Greg, glad to hear that works! We've got earthworms like crazy here in the (rainy but warmish) winter, but the ground is so dry in summertime I haven't been able to find any - they must just burrow deeper than I'm willing to dig in my garden. If I could collect up extras in winter and freeze them, that would be great.

  3. #13
    Forum Moderator aSnakeLovinBabe's Avatar
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    Re: Cat food???

    Quote Originally Posted by gregmonsta View Post
    I've frozen earthworms before ... defrosted in cold water they turned out just fine
    I second that!
    Mother of many snakes and a beautiful baby girl! I am also a polymer clay artist!


  4. #14
    Forum Moderator aSnakeLovinBabe's Avatar
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    Re: Cat food???

    Quote Originally Posted by DrKate View Post
    Thanks for trying the experiment, Tina! Mr. Francis says adult garters usually switch to it "readily" - I was pretty skeptical of that, myself. (Looking at it again, I think he's maybe using something chunky rather than the smooth pate-style stuff. Maybe a snake used to taking dead items would be more willing to try chunks than a plate of pate.)

    Well anyway, I was just curious if anyone was feeding cat food regularly, since Francis' Homemade Trout Jello is so legendary. For the sciencey types out there, the Merck Veterinary Manual mentions cat food as being too high in protein for carnivorous reptiles in general. Interestingly, this also suggests to me that feeding fillet strips (i.e. no organs or gut contents) as the majority of the diet might not be the best long-term strategy either, even if you're careful about keeping calcium intake up. Maybe deep-freezing whole guppies to minimize parasite risks would be a good base diet.

    Anyone tried deep-freezing wild-caught earthworms to minimize *their* parasite loads? In my mind, a thawed earthworm just turns to gray mush. But maybe it works better than I imagine...

    -Kate
    to be perfectly honest, I am sure if I offered it to my garters, the would down it and not think twice. My garters are just too used to eating anything as long as it's held by tongs... but I still won't ever try it!
    Mother of many snakes and a beautiful baby girl! I am also a polymer clay artist!


  5. #15
    Old and wise snake charles parenteau's Avatar
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    Re: Cat food???

    Turtle food stick works ...but I prefer trout mixture and earth worm.

  6. #16
    Forum Moderator aSnakeLovinBabe's Avatar
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    Re: Cat food???

    I would not feed turtle food sticks on their own, simply because they are made for omnivorous turtles and contain a lot of plant-based materials. In the reptomin food sticks, there are different parts of wheat, corn, soybeans, potatoes and algae all listed as major ingredients, with the only meat protein being fish meal and shrimp meal. I saw some baby checkereds advertised on KS once who were being fed solely these sticks... I emailed the guy asking him you know... hey, how hard is it to feed a snake what it's really supposed to be eating? There's so much vegetable stuff in those they can't possibly be very sustaining without feeding them to the snake endlessly! I never got a response... Our snakes cannot harness all of that vegetably stuff, but it won't hurt to stuff small prey items such as feeder guppies with these sticks. Their plus is that they are vitamin fortified and add some extra bulk to a somewhat watery, easily digestible food item such as a little fish. In my eyes, stuffing fishes with reptomin would be the equivalent of gutloading crickets before feeding, it's like feeding a very well fed fish to your snakes! My only complaint with the food sticks, is that they are dyed and I don't even like to use salmon that's been dyed if I can avoid it!
    Mother of many snakes and a beautiful baby girl! I am also a polymer clay artist!


  7. #17
    Old and wise snake charles parenteau's Avatar
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    Re: Cat food???

    Shannon your absolutely right!and I dint mean to do .
    I saw few one with turtle stick but I DONT fed my snake with it!Moistened Reptomin turtle food stick saw it in vivarium magazine and reptile magazine 1995.
    I only fed my garter with worms and trout mixture .
    On summer time its 50/50 worm and trout mixture ,on winter time when they dont hibernated .1/3 worms and 2/3 trout mixture .

    Its so easy for me to seach for worms from april to late November.

    By the way i don't encourage people to fed with worm for fishing sell a the store .they become toxic for some reasons and long terme feeding with it that can kill your snake or make them ill .Go search your worms in the wild its better.same thing with fish.for exemple its better trapp minow in a pound than feeding with golden fish...
    Small thing make big difference.

  8. #18
    Old and wise snake KITKAT's Avatar
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    Re: Cat food???

    I have a baby eastern that was not eating well, and I got her eating by feeding her shredded Friskies cat food. The shredded food is basically a gravy with "noodles" of solid food in it, and I fished out the noodles, wiped off most of the gravy, and fed a few.

    The flavor was ocean fish, I think... the label is blue.

    Now she is eating baby nightcrawlers and salmon pieces.
    KitKat
    "Acts of kindness should never be random."

  9. #19
    T. radix Ranch guidofatherof5's Avatar
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    Re: Cat food???

    Using it for one that may have died from "failure to thrive" is a good trade off. Glad you gave it a shot and put the time and effort into the little one. I would love to see a picture.
    Steve
    5 awesome kids!
    Emmy, Kale, Molly, Gabby, Hailee
    They are not just snakes. They're garter snakes.
    http://www.youtube.com/user/thamnophis14?feature=mhee

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