![]() ![]() I have mine on newspaper with a water bowl, a heating pad under one side of their tanks, I have them in 40 gallon breeder tanks with sliding tops for the time being, a ton of frozen mice, and a stack of newspaper since they poop a lot. ![]() They were on my list of must-haves for a while before I actually found any. I got a pair of neonates almost two years ago and they have been pretty easy and very rewarding captives. I think Texas Indigo's are very easy captives, in my experience with them. Just looking for useful information from someone who has kept these guys I may be overlooking or just advice in general. I'll try the male again after first shed. SHOCKED my female ate it! My male didn't but I figured that would be the case but I can't tell you how happy I am she ate a mouse. They were born 2 nights ago and today I just gave each a mouse for kicks as today was feeding day for all my snakes. I know the need a large cage, plenty of burrowing substrate, they are a mess and poop out something GAWD awful smelling but I'm willing to stick with them. I'm sure they are not hard to find for some of you but. I've never seen these guys for sale, I was always late to the table that had a pair or just couldn't find them. (You know, that list of snakes you always wanted but knew it wouldn't be easy) Ok so the Texas Indigo really is just close enough to the real one I wanted (Eastern Indigo). I can now mark off the Texas Indigo snake from my "Must have" list. Welcome Anonymous Register a Nickname! or Captive care Texas Indigo - Experts Forum at ![]()
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