After a few years of owning a snake.?
is it recommended to get a Burmese Python? After a few years with Corns, Balls, and Kings? would you be ready for them by that point. a few years routine like 3 years or 4 years.
The snakes you mentioned are fine snakes in their own right, but caring for them doesn't really prepare you for a snake the size & temperament of a burmese. These snakes require a vastly different environment and feeding template, plus the sheer size differential makes caring for these large constrictors an vast undertaking. Read up & talk to experienced handlers and try handling one of their specimens before making this outcome. Good luck.
Make sure that you research everything going on for this snake before you buy one. Also ask yourself will you be able to take prudence of him/her its entire life, will you be able to afford food, will you be able to house it properly. If you don't hold children yet, what will happen with the snake when you own children or get married? I'm sure as you know a Burmese isn't anything like a corn snake, so please kind sure you are ready for the extra commitment and expenses that come near this type of snake.
I would try to obtain a red tail boa.
Because that is going from 5 feet to lke 18 feet.
At tiniest the boa is 10 feet.
What happened to the other snakes? They live for a very long time so where did they budge? If you're a snake collector and have many different types I understand since they're awesome pets, but whether you've given them away then you might not want to get a burmese. They're expensive to purchase, not to mention paying for the huge container it'll need. You'll also have to feed it rabbits or two rats at a time and that can cost alot of money. Be certain you have the finances to care for you burmese before getting it! Best of luck!
Answers: Really that depends on how successful you have been next to the snakes you have and how much you know about what you want to get. I would close to to think that you know size wise what you are buying, and of course it doesn't crop up over night. But, eventually you will have a large snake on your hand and you will need the space to keep it. If you are a handy guy, you can build an enclosure pretty smoothly, and it will be alot cheaper then buying one... but that wasn't your question.
If you are confident in your husbandry, you should be fine. Baby burms bite, but it stops next to handling, just make sure you do not nurture it in it's home, because a large shut within aggressive snake is a disaster waiting to happen.