Hey all! I have been gone a long time. But now I'm back, have no fear. I'm posting some updates about my own reptile, and some that I work with often but do not own.
First things first - last year I posted some pictures of my bearded dragon Kaiah; she/he was young then, and is still young, but now she/he is fully grown (I originally thought Kaiah was female, but now that Kaiah is basically an adult I'm leaning much more toward male). Here is Kaiah currently:
He's still on newspaper, and his enclosure is extremely boring. I know beardies don't need a whole heck of a lot going on in their cage but believe me...it's boring. I'm adding a sandbox and maybe some other climbing material in the near future!
Other reptiles: I've been spending a lot more time with the reptiles at the university where I work as a student animal caretaker (we have a diverse collection of 27 species of all kinds of animals). My favorite reptile (since this is the reptile forum) is...all of them. I love all of them. I'm not anywhere close to being an expert, but of the workers currently helping over the summer I'm the most experienced reptile person. I'm pretty much the only tegu handler, and I'm one of the only ones brave enough to get out the kingsnake or the boa on a regular basis. Our red-tailed boa can be challenging, though, she's too curious for her own good and gets stuck places sometimes. She's kind of fat for a snake and doesn't realize that just because her head fits doesn't mean the rest of her fits.
I do have one question, though - what is the best method to go about socializing a juvenile black rat snake? We have one that I think is 1-2 years old, slightly less than a foot long, and he's not quite as big around as your finger (his head is smaller than a thumbnail). For a tiny snake he's a huge brat, he gets really stressed out when we try to handle him - rattles his tale, strikes, the whole nine yards. To be fair, getting him out is REALLY noisy, we have to tape his cage shut because he is tiny and has escaped multiple times - the noise bothers him a lot. But he still needs to be handled. I'm okay handling him, but my bravery won't help the workers who aren't comfortable with snakes and don't bother getting him out because he bites or is small. Obviously handling is the answer here, but is there any little trick or method that works well with young snakes?
Here is Rickey the baby rat snake (no, the spatula is NOT in his cage):