|
83725
Regardless of everythiong that an albino burm may be prone to, I still beleive that more than anything, their health and wellbeing depend more on the person who is keeping them. I have had my female albino burm for a bit more than a year, she is nearing 8 ft, and has never been in any less than perfect health(aside from when she was at the pet store).
More than anything though. I would tend to think that it is most important to know that YOU are ready to handle a burm, and if you already have one, that you can handle two and so on. I personally could care less whatanyone says, I firmly believe that the care you give is the deciding factor on what health your snake is in. Just so we know this is no kind of arrogant bias, I have had snakes die, some for reasons I couldn't help, and some becaus I had made a wrong decision(which obviously I felt was right at the time).
Anyways, it depends more on the keeper than the snake. A friend of mine managed to tame a severely neglected female afr. rock that I even had problems with, and now, she is 9 ft and kitten tame.
[addsig]
|