Best house friendly snake?
I'm really interested in getting a snake, but I'd really like a small one (that stays small) that's people friendly. Any suggestions?
a male orb python the famales are also very tame but are in my opion are a short time to over protected about themselves,
a baby should go within a 10 gallon then when their adult a 40 gallon
they need a boil mat (uth)
aspen bedding or newspaper
two hides on on warm and cool side
a hose down dish big enough for them to fit their whole body in
and a not dangerous lid
feed them once a week and of coures when they get bigger the size of the rodent gets bigger
The corn snake by far. The Corn Snake has to be the best beginner pet snake in that is to own. Available in a range of different colour morphs makes choosing exciting. They are unforced to care, maintain, feed and resembling to be handled. They range from southeast America and northeast Canada.
As with adjectives snakes, they need a high temperature during the year to allow their food to digest. If this is not provided, the snake will regurgitate the meal back up to prevent this from rotting within their stomach. A temperature of 30C (85F) should be provided during the day beside a drop down to 25C (75F) at night. The easiest way to provide bake is to place a heat mat under 1/3 of the tank and use a low wattage bulb during the daytime to stimulate the day time hours. The cool end must be provided near a water dish so the snake can maintain its own temperature.
Hope you seize the corn snake
Egg eating snakes are cool
especially if you don't want to nurture it rats or mice
and i think they can get like 27in.
Corn snakes are great for what you're looking for, reaching an average length of 3-4 feet with little body bulk. They come surrounded by many different colour morphs, many of which are very bright and attractive. Corn snakes are incredibly docile; I haven't once heard of one biting. You will need an aquarium (10 gal for a hatchling, 20 gal for an adult) or terrarium with a locking lid and no opening, a (made for humans) heating pad, a hide box, a full-size water dish and some sort of lighting. Adult corns only need to be feed once a week. They feed on mice; I recommend you only buy one which eats dead/frozen. Remember that although corns are constrictor snakes, they are not arboreal, and cannot cling around your arm or nouns like some others. You must be sure to support their body evenly when handling them.
a corn snake is pretty small and friendly. thats probably your best choice, although iv seen them where there resembling maybe 2 feet long and kind of large. theres also hognose snakes that dont get real big, well i havn't see any. there mostly friendly from what ive heard. garter snakes dont get to big. they attain long but they stay skinny. there usually not friendly because most of them you see are caught in the out of control but a bred garter snake most likely will be friendly.
I've get to say a ball python. Corn snakes are good as long as you can preserve them in the cage. If you have children that could knock the lid sour, a corn snake is not the pet for you. They are excellent climbers.
Answers: garter snake or corn snake
i would be in motion with corn snake
corn snakes stay small and the ones i have where nice too!