Under captive conditions, mostsnakeswill thrive on a diet consisting offrozen/thawedrodents. For example, generations of captive breeding have made it wheresnakesthat only eat birds in the wild will easily accept afrozen/thawedmouse in captivity. It is ultimately the owner's responsibility to understand the dietaryrequirementsof the animals in their collection. The following article ...
, then move tofrozen/thawed. If you are keeping yoursnakeon a loosesubstrate(reptile bark, aspen, etc.) do not fee yoursnakein its enclosure. Loosesubstratecan stick to prey items and be ingested, caus , asnakemay refuse to feed. Food refusal is caused by a number of things such as incorrect environmental conditions, a shed phase, being

Moving forward, it's essential to keep these visual contexts in mind when discussing Frozen Thawed Snake Substrate Requirements.
· Transition thesnakefrom live, to prekilled, and then tofrozen/thawed. · Try room temperature prey. · Scent the prey with dirty rat/mouse/ASFsubstrate. · Heat prey under a heat lamp · In the same room as thesnakes, blow dry the prey item to heat it up further and to scent the room. · Dip the prey into chicken broth.

You should of-fer your kingsnake rodents that are about the size of thesnakeat thesnake'swidest section, or slightly larger than that. Feed your kingsnakefrozen/thawedrodents — exclusively, if possible. They are easy to acquire, easy to store, easy to prepare, and safer than the freshly killed alterna-tive.
