Question:

Whats a good second snake???

by  |  earlier

0 LIKES UnLike

Besides corn snake,i have that. It has to be bigger than 3 feet.

All answers are fine, just i want the name of a snake you like.

 Tags:

   Report

12 ANSWERS


  1. From my understanding ball pythons are the second most popular snake in the pet trade. With hundreds of different morphs and what is most likely one of the nicest temperaments of any snake, they make a good choice as a first or second pet snake. Their feeding requirements are similar to those of a corn snake. They are much more pleasant to handle as they are not squirmy and very calm. The important thing is to maintain heat AND humidity. My first snake was a Ball and is one of my all time favorites. A grown adult ranges from 4-5 feet an they are thick.


  2. Hey, i have a reptile shop and i am a reptile breeder and i have all of these :

    African Rock Python

    Amazon Tree Boa

    Angolan Python

    Brazilian Rainbow Boa

    Brown House Snake

    Burmese Python

    Calabar Ground Python

    Californian King Snake

    Cape File Snake

    Chequered Garter Snake

    Columbian Rainbow Boa

    Common Boa Constrictor

    Corn Snake

    Eastern Common Garter Snake

    Eastern Ribbon Snake

    Ecuadorian Rainbow Boa

    Egg Eating Snake

    Emerald Tree Boa

    Flying Snake

    Great Plains Ratsnake

    Green Anaconda

    Green Tree Python

    Grey Banded King Snake

    Mexican Black Kingsnake

    Mexican Milk Snake

    Montane Egg Eating Snake

    Mullers Sand Boa

    Nelsons Milk Snake

    Paraguayan Rainbow Boa

    Peters Worm Snake

    Pueblan Milk Snake

    Red and Black Striped Snake

    Red Blood Python

    Red Sided Common Garter Snake

    Red Tailed Boa Constrictor

    Reticulated Python

    Ball Pyhton

    Scrub Python

    Sinaloan Milk Snake

    Smooth and Rough Green Snake

    Texas Rat Snake

    Trinket Snake

    Vietnam Red Tailed Racer

    Viper Boa

    White Lipped Python (he died yesturday though)

    Woma Python

    Well here is an idea what you can have for a second snake but if your ever want one e-mail me and i can ship it to you and give you a great discount...


  3. the black and white striped viper.

  4. Ball pythons are nice (but unfortunately i don't have this one) >.<

    California Kingsnake (they're pretty docile for me, mine never bites me in a year at all)

    Milksnake (Though he's pretty fast and like to move around when handled, mines isn't aggressive and never bites either. He just musk around) ^^

    Green Tree Pythons (They're not that docile. If you wanna have extra challenge, think this is your choice. Mine is a decent one, not aggressive, but i can't say that he's docile either. He bit me once when i had him for bout 3 months)

    Hope this helps ^^

  5. blood pythons make a pretty good intermediate snake.  

  6. Well, I was going to say a baby Banded Water Snake, until you said more than 3 feet. So then I guess Ball Python, or other Pythons. But here's a really great website to go to. ReptileDepot.com! Try it!

  7. I'd say kingsnake, boa, python, all cool snakes

  8. Boas. Fun, huge, which is great, and actually can make great pets if you handle them alot. Don't go off to the amazon and get one. Then you'll end up dead.

    Just so you know. :)

  9. I have had just about all of them, and loved them all. But my all time favorite is my bull snake. I love his personality, he loves to be held and watch what is going on around him. They can get up to 9 feet but more likely to get 4 or 5 feet.

  10. I really like Carpet Pythons. There are several different sub-species of them and they all make really nice pets. They're a bit nippy as babies but a few days of handling will tame them down as "gentle as lambs"

  11. BALL PYTHON!, son.

    idk if I just got really lucky or what but bro..

    my ball is such a doll.

  12. Red tailed boas are great, but they can get 6-12 feet. The average male is about 6-8 feet, while a female is between 8-12 feet. Ball pythons are cool, too. A ball python will get about 4-5 feet long. A ball python doesn't need a big cage (20 gallon long min. size as an adult), but a red tailed boa needs a 75 gallon min. as an adult. I hope this helps.

Question Stats

Latest activity: earlier.
This question has 12 answers.

BECOME A GUIDE

Share your knowledge and help people by answering questions.
Unanswered Questions