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Is there such a thing as a Dwarf Morph Corn?

Thanks all for the replies - and concerns!

Clearly I Romney’d out pretty bad; no snake-abuse happening here!

What I should have explained is that in many hours of googling “what is the smallest pet snake”, “smallest cornsnake”, “smallest kingsnake”, etc, et al, I found many posts on many boards referring to snakes getting big, fast, due to over-feeding. And of corns getting to 4-feet or even more in some cases.

The inverse of the above then; is to not overfeed your snake.

I got my snake on Aug 26th, age unknown – 2, 3 weeks old? After the first week of acclimation, I have been feeding her a pinkie a week ever since with no probs.
She is now 17” long and about as thick as a standard Sharpie marker, but still with the out-of-proportion baby-head and bug-eyes. I haven’t seen any shed yet, and if she even has shed – it could be buried in the aspen she tunnels thru.

A friend – the only/singular/one adult I personally know who is into snakes – will be in town in a week and said he’d look her over, he said if she’s still too small to safely eat a fuzzy without fear of possible re-gurge, maybe it’s time to move on to 2 pinkies a week.

Regardless of the above, he reminded me that he told me to go with a Hognose or a BP as they will be shorter than a corn. I didn’t listen ‘cause these corns are so beautiful. Whatever.

In my universe, folks consider dogs and cats as pets, while a snake is a terror.
Soooooo, I have to keep a “low profile snake” as there is nowhere in my house to place my snake’s aquarium for its health and well-being without it being obvious. Unfortunately it has to be out of sight, out of mind until enough time has passed that the fears were obviously unfounded.

No Vietnamese Blue Beauty in an upright tank for me anytime soon… :uhoh:
 
(Nothing to add to the discussion at hand--but wanted to point out that Ball Pythons most definitely get bigger than corn snakes. ;) Regardless of length, they are very girthy snakes and easily need as large an enclosure as an adult corn snake. It's always important to remember that length alone can be very misleading!

Okay, I'm done. Carry on! :))
 
And of corns getting to 4-feet or even more in some cases.
To be fair, it would be a rare Corn that was less than 4 feet. You can pretty much guarantee that yours will be longer.

Generally it's "waistline" that's affected by overfeeding. If you powerfeed a youngster then it will reach its potential adult length faster. But once it's hit that, then it will grow outwards. And they can pile on flab surprisingly fast, after which it's a nightmare to shift. Obese snakes have all of the associated health risks that obese humans, cats and dogs do.

If it helps, I always prefer my Corns on the lean side and keep adults to as minimal a maintenance diet as appropriate for each individual. But at no point has this made them any shorter.
 
Thanks all for the replies - and concerns!

Clearly I Romney’d out pretty bad; no snake-abuse happening here!

Just gotta say I love this turn of phrase!

Glad to know you will be feeding it per its regular prey size, that's definitely good to clear up! Its troublesome that you don't feel that you can be open about your pet, but as long as its receiving proper care, that's all I was worried about!
 
Soooooo, I have to keep a “low profile snake” as there is nowhere in my house to place my snake’s aquarium for its health and well-being without it being obvious. Unfortunately it has to be out of sight, out of mind until enough time has passed that the fears were obviously unfounded.

Sorry to hear that you have to hide your snake. Do you have it in a plastic bin now? Lots of people use large bins for adult snakes too. With a heat source underneath they don't need a light source, so they can easily fit under a bed, in a drawer (make sure there's enough air) or on a shelving unit. Just watch out for fire hazards.
 
Hi Teatime - no, the basic 5.5gal lockable "snakaquarium" with the screened top. Have a 10gal on standby for when she gets a bit bigger.
Have a UTH that is OK with the 5.5, but will have to get a bigger UTH setup for the larger aquarium when she is moved.

No bins for me, I want to be able to see her easily even if others around here don't! That plus there is that comfort factor of seeing that all is in-place and "normal", so that everyone knows where she is at all times.
 
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