Woma Python Care Video

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Uploaded by on Sep 24, 2009

If you see something wrong with this care vid, limit the hate mail and just tell me, I'm not an "expert", but have had expiriences with womas and have researched a lot.

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Pets & Animals

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Uploader Comments (r8erfaan)

  • THE ASPIDITES RAMSAYI AND ASPIDITIES MELANACEPHALOS BOTH HAVE HEAT SENSING PITS!!!! Look at the front of their mouth on the top lip. This was proven 3 years ago. Your Woma digging is a natural behaviour considering their natural environment is usually in termite mounds, and it involves them digging a bit. It also keeps them out of the 50+ degree (thats celcius) heat that is common in the Pilbara region where they are most common.

    MON

  • ok then well if what ur saying is true than thanks for the info, but I get ur statement just as well without the caps and "!!!!!!".

  • raiders>pittsburg

  • u know it =). and nice account name.

  • Nice video raiders suck though sorry/

  • ya... I know

Top Comments

  • nice bro, fuck any haters and all that shit, i just got one of these snakes and he's fuckin awesome

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All Comments (61)

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  • I do love their personalities and they seem active all the time, which means it'll be a great snake to watch when I don't have it out of the cage. I was concerned about their aggressive feeding behavior and it sounds scary but in all the feeding videos I seen they acted normal and just took the food quicker but not striking at everything that moved. I think I do want a woma now before a ball python. I'm coming to like ball pythons; use to hate them. But how they ball up and don't care is cute.

  • 40 gallon good

  • what substrate do you have in this tank at moment?

    yep, they dig their own burrows or "steal" others'

  • @r8erfaan Head bobbing and tail wagging (it's not tail luring) mean they are excited about feeding time, not hunting as they only seem to do that in captivity?!

    "Once they have reached adult size I have never owned or seen a woma that wants to bite out of aggression or out of fear. All their bites are related to food. When handling them, as with many species of python, it is a good idea to wash your hands and arms with a strong smelling soap so that errors of mistaken identity are avoided"

  • @r8erfaan download care sheet here:

    southernxreptiles(dot)com/Arti­cle%20PDFs/woma_lr(dot)pdf

    and watch this:

    pilbarapythons(dot)com/woma_vi­deo(dot)htm

  • @MiddleOfNoWhere676 Yep, under their rostral scales!

  • @r8erfaan he must have been a bit outrageous with that comment.

    maybe he also din't noticed the "I'm not an "expert" on your description?

    check out: Pilbara Pythons(dot)com videos

  • what is the name of that song!! damnit brainfart!

  • hot side needs to be 100-104f mate, cool side you have right.

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