T O P I C R E V I E W |
lee2308 |
Posted - 12/07/2011 : 11:03:00 Not sure if this has been posted but my daughter found this last night and i thought you royal lovers would like it. http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsround/14059541 |
5 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
n/a |
Posted - 12/07/2011 : 21:19:39 Oh god yes, I agree - treating the birth defect as some sort of gimmick would be really sick, and in any case such animals would need a degree of specialised care.
I'd be prepared to take one on in case no-one else would have it - I have a couple of snakes acquired that way, my one-eyed Cy and my Missy, who had an 'attitude problem' - problem grown out of in Missy's case - and they are very special. |
acd1984 |
Posted - 12/07/2011 : 21:12:20 It would be great to have a two headed royal, it would cost a packet though.
Although I could also imagine idiots trying to breed the defect into the species for profit, then I wouldnt entertain the idea. |
n/a |
Posted - 12/07/2011 : 14:24:44 These critters seem to occur in all species of snakes - no reason why they shouldn't survive with sympathetic ownership though ...yeah, if both heads are sentient, maybe you'd have to give each head a small prey item at the same time to keep the 'twins' happy and prevent any quarrelling but as OHO says, prevent a lot of food causing a blockage, though I imagine the gullet will expand like any other royal gullet ...
A challenge, and very interesting! |
Oh How Original |
Posted - 12/07/2011 : 14:17:28 No, all other snakes that have 2 heads have only needed to feed one head, as it's only a head and not a body, I'm pretty sure they both just live off all the same things, I imagine you'd have to feed very small and lots though so there was no ripping where the heads join or something... |
stumpy |
Posted - 12/07/2011 : 12:52:33 Weird. Wonder if he has to feed both snakes, can only cope with one that dosent feed |