Lloyd2302
Not so new Member
Hi all,
I was called to a house to remove a coastal carpet python that had entered a guinea pig hutch (the day after the night of the 45 degree day Brisbane had a couple days ago). Upon arriving, the snake was dead and had been for a few hours or more, and without any human interference, I wondered how? Had the snake simply eaten itself to death? Eaten too much guinea pig substrate? I will attach a photograph of the snake after I hauled it out of the hutch. The lumps were big, very big, I was almost certain there may have been three guinea pigs but was told only two were in the now empty hutch.
On a brighter note, as I was about to leave the residence with the dead carpet python, the two dogs were going at a beautiful common tree snake, which I also removed in fear it was gonna become just another glorious harmless snake eaten by well fed canines.
Cheers and looking forward to hearing others' thoughts and opinions..
I was called to a house to remove a coastal carpet python that had entered a guinea pig hutch (the day after the night of the 45 degree day Brisbane had a couple days ago). Upon arriving, the snake was dead and had been for a few hours or more, and without any human interference, I wondered how? Had the snake simply eaten itself to death? Eaten too much guinea pig substrate? I will attach a photograph of the snake after I hauled it out of the hutch. The lumps were big, very big, I was almost certain there may have been three guinea pigs but was told only two were in the now empty hutch.
On a brighter note, as I was about to leave the residence with the dead carpet python, the two dogs were going at a beautiful common tree snake, which I also removed in fear it was gonna become just another glorious harmless snake eaten by well fed canines.
Cheers and looking forward to hearing others' thoughts and opinions..