Hey all,
I am running into an issue getting my adult red-tail boa to eat again... I've had her for about 10 years, and during that time she's consistently eaten a frozen/thawed XXL rat every 2-4 weeks. She was never super "hungry", but she was consistent... she's a pretty sizable girl, too... around 8-9 ft. Always has fresh water, and I haven't modified husbandry in years.
Since the beginning of the year though, she hasn't eaten more than once a month, and I haven't gotten her to eat anything since April. She still roams her cage, flicks and shows interest while moving, has great muscle tone, and drinks water and passes urates. No obvious signs of RI or any yawning or chewing motions... no saliva/mucous discharges that I can see. She is starting to get a bit skinny though, and I'm not sure if I should be worried yet. I am about to undertake a "starting eliminating the obvious things" type checklist... get her on paper instead of cypress mulch (which I've kept her on for years, shouldn't be an issue, but hey why not). Order new feeders in case mine are starting to go bad (coming up on a year in the freezer since I buy in bulk from RodentPro and she is my only large snake).
My normal course of action is to drop frozen straight into hot water and let them thaw for an hour and a half and throw them in her cage on brown Kraft paper spread out. I've been doing this for years now, it's a routine she recognizes. More recently the last few attempts to feed I've let them "air thaw" and then sat them in front of a space heater for 20 mins or so before putting them in... I've heard that the "dry, warm fuzzy" character might provoke some interest when "wet, warm, drowned rat" isn't getting eaten. I have a 6ft long male Okeetee corn whose food I prepare the same way, and he's been pounding them fine all along.
So... I'm thinking of trying a smaller, new shipment from a different feeder supplier. I've grown increasingly dissatisfied with condition RodentPro's feeders show up in, and I'm wondering if something that's a bit "fresher-smelling" will work. If that doesn't work, what's the next logical step? Rabbits? Guinea pigs? trying live? I've been keeping reptiles a LONG time, but until now have never dealt with a feeding issue. Just looking for some advice.
Unless you see a bona fide husbandry issue above, I'm not sure that highlighting that I don't keep her exactly like you keep yours will be helpful...
Shes been doing great, growing, and shedding every 2-3 months for the last decade. Thanks in advance for any help anyone feels led to offer! 
I am running into an issue getting my adult red-tail boa to eat again... I've had her for about 10 years, and during that time she's consistently eaten a frozen/thawed XXL rat every 2-4 weeks. She was never super "hungry", but she was consistent... she's a pretty sizable girl, too... around 8-9 ft. Always has fresh water, and I haven't modified husbandry in years.
Since the beginning of the year though, she hasn't eaten more than once a month, and I haven't gotten her to eat anything since April. She still roams her cage, flicks and shows interest while moving, has great muscle tone, and drinks water and passes urates. No obvious signs of RI or any yawning or chewing motions... no saliva/mucous discharges that I can see. She is starting to get a bit skinny though, and I'm not sure if I should be worried yet. I am about to undertake a "starting eliminating the obvious things" type checklist... get her on paper instead of cypress mulch (which I've kept her on for years, shouldn't be an issue, but hey why not). Order new feeders in case mine are starting to go bad (coming up on a year in the freezer since I buy in bulk from RodentPro and she is my only large snake).
My normal course of action is to drop frozen straight into hot water and let them thaw for an hour and a half and throw them in her cage on brown Kraft paper spread out. I've been doing this for years now, it's a routine she recognizes. More recently the last few attempts to feed I've let them "air thaw" and then sat them in front of a space heater for 20 mins or so before putting them in... I've heard that the "dry, warm fuzzy" character might provoke some interest when "wet, warm, drowned rat" isn't getting eaten. I have a 6ft long male Okeetee corn whose food I prepare the same way, and he's been pounding them fine all along.
So... I'm thinking of trying a smaller, new shipment from a different feeder supplier. I've grown increasingly dissatisfied with condition RodentPro's feeders show up in, and I'm wondering if something that's a bit "fresher-smelling" will work. If that doesn't work, what's the next logical step? Rabbits? Guinea pigs? trying live? I've been keeping reptiles a LONG time, but until now have never dealt with a feeding issue. Just looking for some advice.
Unless you see a bona fide husbandry issue above, I'm not sure that highlighting that I don't keep her exactly like you keep yours will be helpful...