Hey again, was busy with college and stuff and the thread took awhile to get approved.

I'll try to get some pics when I can.

Best bet for me would be to feed him pinky mice since there is not really any local petstores I know of that sell un-thiaminase fish. Petco and Petsmart are really my only options.

Although the snake(don't know if male/female) does not really go for things already dead.

@Previouscoments: Yeah Petstore employees really don't know anything, unless it is about a dog or a cat.

But my original question still stands, would I start to see any thiaminase related health developments after all these years. BTW this snake was an addition to two wild caught alligator lizards with one caught up by stampede lake and the caught by my dad near a water treatment plant for the county way back when,[they lasted for 7-10(i'll have to find my old photo pics that have the exact dates on them) years] which has outlasted both of them.

How long should I expect one of these snakes to live for assuming no problems arise?

Also when I caught the snake it was already about 1 foot long exactly and my lizards were already between 2-3 years old at the time when snake was added(thats adding in estimated time based on their size from approximate wild birth, lizards were probably one years each when I put them in a tank with the second one caught about half a year older than the first).

Sorry for the little tangent there, but maybe this snake somehow has a higher tolerance to the thiamine defficiency because of its history of being a wild caught snake?

Would love to hear more of your guys/gals theory on it. I'll try to have pics next time I post. BTW there is no red in the snake, just what i said before. No blues either.