Bright Scale
New member
I was just thinking about the second snake that I may get myself in a year or two, sometime after college is done with anyway. I particularly want a rubber boa or an Egyptian sand boa, but then I remembered that whole IBD business.
For the foreseeable future, I and all my animals (one male ball, one female/two unsexed tarantulas) live in one large room of a four-person apartment. So quarantining would be hard, since the disease is airborne. Just how prevalent is this disease? I know boas are likely to be asymptomatic carriers if they have it, which makes things even harder. I'd be getting the second snake from one of the "good guy certified" well-reviewed breeders, but even then I guess there's a risk, right?
Are there any particular other airborne health hazards the two types of snakes might give each other? If the risk to my first baby, Rorschach, is unavoidable, I just won't do it. He's the most important thing.
For the foreseeable future, I and all my animals (one male ball, one female/two unsexed tarantulas) live in one large room of a four-person apartment. So quarantining would be hard, since the disease is airborne. Just how prevalent is this disease? I know boas are likely to be asymptomatic carriers if they have it, which makes things even harder. I'd be getting the second snake from one of the "good guy certified" well-reviewed breeders, but even then I guess there's a risk, right?
Are there any particular other airborne health hazards the two types of snakes might give each other? If the risk to my first baby, Rorschach, is unavoidable, I just won't do it. He's the most important thing.