- provides NO enrichment to his animals and keeps them in enclosures that are extremely small (x) (x)
- keeps multiple leopard geckos housed together in small tubs that are extremely dirty (x)
- keeps an ALLIGATOR in a KIDDIE POOL.. cmon, anyone should know that is not right (x)
- sells bad quality morphs (his tangerine leopard gecko for sale) vs (an actual quality tangerine)
- basically the reptile equivalent of a puppy mill - constantly breeding animals with no regard to their health. there are not very many laws protecting reptile welfare, so legally not much can be done against him.
- multiple reports of snakes being sent out with mites, respiratory infections, incorrect genes - AND when people email about it, he does not reply or try to fix the situation
- lies about his animals - he had a snake named sunshine and people noticed that she looked different in later videos... guess what. the original sunshine died due to untreated infection and instead of explaining the situation, he got ANOTHER snake of the same morph (sunshine 2) and pretended like nothing happened. he also was working on a scaleless project (mr. smooth) and as you can see his skin is extremely cracked and dry. brian posts photoshopped pictures of him like this to cover it up. a few months after he hatched, no more updates. brian mysteriously never mentioned it again (mr. smooth died!)
- another example of him lying. one of his snakes had an extremely bad injury which he claimed occurred when the snake escaped and accidentally got hurt. this is a picture from the video where she escaped, and as you can see, NO injury. the snake had a bad case of untreated infection that brian did not care about.
- again, another instance of lying. people told him that his reticulated python needs more room because it can't even stretch out in its current enclosure. brian basically said "they don't even need room!" even though they DO stretch out and they DO need room (picture of wild reticulated python)
Uchuujin wrote:GUYS.
So waaay back months ago my best friends mom was snakesitting and as a result ALL THREE of my ball pythons escaped their tanks and were never found again. I was really really upset but just assumed they'd never make it on their own in the wild. I even got rid of my snake stuff, because I didn't think I wanted to deal with that again after so suddenly losing three babies.
However today (9 or 10 months since they disappeared) my best friends mom noticed someone posted in the neighborhood fb group that they found a snake in their yard. She sent us a pic and it is one of my snakes!
She has grown and seems to be a really healthy weight. My friend went to pick her up for me and said she's still super mellow and loving. She does have a wound on her neck. It looks like something she tried to eat bit her and so she came out of hiding looking for health.
Suddenly I find myself with a snake but no tank, no heating, no food or hides or ANYTHING and she needs to see a vet lol so I have nooooo idea what to do
But i'm really glad shes back and ok
Midnight Mare wrote:My baby ball python, Gerald, passed away late November 10th. It seems he had a seizure. We went to the pet store to tell a friend of mine who worked there and was very fond of him and there was someone there who hadn't been when I'd previously gone in for advice who knew a lot about snakes. He said that it was probably a neurological problem caused by inconsistent temperatures in the hatchery. He was very, very small. We bought him the day that they would have tried to feed him the first time. He never ate on his own. I always had to assist feed him and I supplemented with Repta-Boost since he wasn't growing.. The guy said that when they tried to feed him and he didn't eat, he'd have been tagged and sent back to the breeder for credit where he ultimately would have been terminated. I had him for six months and he never grew and only shed once toward the end. The shed took forever and wasn't finished by the time he passed. We did salt water soaks, he had a humidihide with rough edges on the entrance, I rubbed coconut oil into it gently, and I put him in a warm, wet pillow case several times. He was spoiled and coddled and got to meet a lot of people and make a big difference in a lot of lives, not just my own. I miss him a lot but I'm really glad I was able to give him what I did.
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