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  1. #1
    Hi, I'm New Here!
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    Re: Can anyone please help?!?

    Well I see we are in a house of glass and most are throwing stones… It seems many of you have had experience in this area of retained sheds, in fact so much so that some you know procedure(s) to deal with this issue. Interesting...
    On with the UPDATE if I may…
    Last night I focused mainly on her upper 2/3rd of her body starting off with a warm water soak and then proceeded to rub in a shed direction with a new emery pad that I first worked with my hands to make pliable for use. This took off all retained shed on the dorsal or costal and vertebral scales. For the bottom ventral or gastrosteges scales I had to remove one by one. I did one other procedure then let her rest then came back with a light coating of Mac Oil. This morning I checked in on her and she gave me a good little love nip and her color is looking better.

  2. #2
    "PM Boots For Custom Title" chris-uk's Avatar
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    Re: Can anyone please help?!?

    Quote Originally Posted by SnakeDoctor View Post
    Well I see we are in a house of glass and most are throwing stones… It seems many of you have had experience in this area of retained sheds, in fact so much so that some you know procedure(s) to deal with this issue. Interesting...
    If you keep enough snakes for long enough you'll see a retained shed, knowing how to recognise it and deal with it with the urgency it deserves is a bad thing? Your vague insinuation is that anyone who has dealt with a retained shed is somehow doing something wrong, or have I misread between the lines? I was unlucky that one of my first garters was a baby with several problems and wouldn't eat and retained a shed. More interesting is that someone with 30 years experience keeping snakes didn't recognise a retained shed or know how to treat it, and then didn't heed the advice he was given. Did you, with all your experience, really think that feeding her was more important than dealing with the retained shed?

    On with the UPDATE if I may…
    Last night I focused mainly on her upper 2/3rd of her body starting off with a warm water soak and then proceeded to rub in a shed direction with a new emery pad that I first worked with my hands to make pliable for use.
    So you sanded the retained shed off? Are you sure you haven't damaged the skin underneath? An emery board is not a method I'd be keen to try, but if the shed had been retained for a month you may not have been successful with more gentle approaches. It seems to me that you asked for advice, but you already had your own method that you planned to use.

    Anyway, in addition to throwing stones, the purpose of my reply is to highlight to anyone reading this thread looking for advice on a retained shed... this is not a textbook way to save your snake.
    Chris
    T. marcianus, T. e. cuitzeoensis, T. cyrtopsis, T. radix, T. s. infernalis, T. s. tetrataenia

  3. #3
    Forum Moderator Stefan-A's Avatar
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    Re: Can anyone please help?!?

    Quote Originally Posted by SnakeDoctor View Post
    Well I see we are in a house of glass and most are throwing stones… It seems many of you have had experience in this area of retained sheds, in fact so much so that some you know procedure(s) to deal with this issue. Interesting...
    Sure thing, doc. That's the only reason why I have a procedure. Because my snakes get month-old retained sheds every other day.

  4. #4
    "Third shed In Progress" kimbosaur's Avatar
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    Re: Can anyone please help?!?

    Quote Originally Posted by SnakeDoctor View Post
    Well I see we are in a house of glass and most are throwing stones… It seems many of you have had experience in this area of retained sheds, in fact so much so that some you know procedure(s) to deal with this issue. Interesting...
    On with the UPDATE if I may…
    Last night I focused mainly on her upper 2/3rd of her body starting off with a warm water soak and then proceeded to rub in a shed direction with a new emery pad that I first worked with my hands to make pliable for use. This took off all retained shed on the dorsal or costal and vertebral scales. For the bottom ventral or gastrosteges scales I had to remove one by one. I did one other procedure then let her rest then came back with a light coating of Mac Oil. This morning I checked in on her and she gave me a good little love nip and her color is looking better.
    I'm glad to hear the snake is doing better, but I'm not sure why you're getting so defensive. Everybody was only offering advice that you asked for with the well-being of your snake in mind. Many have shared their personal experiences of what works best to solve the problem, as well as their personal experiences with what happens if the situation is not immediately dealt with. You chose to disregard the advice for whatever reason. If you go somewhere looking for advice, find out that most or all view your situation as urgent, receive personal feedback about how to handle the problem, ignore everybody and let the problem drag on, then come back and boast about how much more experience you have than everybody else and how your way is better, what did you expect would happen?
    kimberly

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