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Paperback The Art of Keeping Snakes Book

ISBN: 1882770633

ISBN13: 9781882770632

The Art of Keeping Snakes

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

For author Philippe de Vosjoli, "art is the actualization of a personal vision or message," and de Vosjoli's passion is snakes, which he believes are among the most beautiful animals on earth. Incorporating snakes into a naturalistic vivarium, the way lizards and amphibians usually are, adds a new element to snake keeping, elevating the hobby to a true art form. In The Art of Keeping Snakes, de Vosjoli pursues this concept and provides advice for...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Amazing!!

This book is a great new way to enjoy reptiles in general, not just snakes. It tells you which species of snakes are best for display, meaning they won't be hiding all the time, and general information on them. The real diamond of this book is the information on creating a natural vivarium for your reptile. A vivarium is a tank which simulates the animal's natural environment. Not only are they beautiful to look at it really brings out the natural behavior of the animal and makes them less stressed (therefore far more enjoyable). This book doesn't really give a step-by-step how-to, but gives enough information to be able to create one of your own with some creativity.

a must for herpers

This book treats the care of snakes differently than any book that I have ever read. I was cautiously optomistic about his method of substrate and cage setup. After reading his book a few times, I decided to give his method of biological substrate a try. It makes everything about the care much more enjoyable, from cage setup to animal observation. I will never go back to the laboratory type cages that I have used for decades. My snakes love it too.

comfy habitat=happy herp

Wow! This book is so detailed. The author stresses how important habitat is to the health and happiness of your snake. He goes into different kinds of snakes,selection, their care,feeding,breeding,health,handling and temperament. By creating the best habitat humanly possible, you will see the animal act natural in a vivarium that is pleasing to look at. He also tells of types of living plants and their care, and a LIVING substrate that cleans itself! There are lots of color photos. If you love your pet snake...get this book!

A true "must have" for many keepers

This book is different in it's approach than any other care book I've seen. The author argues for, and shows how to do, quasi-natural to naturalist setups for many common serpents. The difference is that most books do not touch natural vivaria for snakes. There has been some recognition of thier benefits with lizards and amphibians, but little to no discussion of thier role in snake husbandry. The book covers the basics of setting up different types of vivaria--i.e. desert and tropic, etc. and list some plants, and substrate mixes that are suitable. He then goes into some particular snakes he feels are well suited for this sort of display. This means the books focuses on small through midsized, diurnal snakes, as they are the best display animals in a natural set up. This excludes many common species, but includes many species equally suited to a beginner--some of which are actually more suited than many more popular species, and hey, it opens up new ideas. These setups, in my experince (I've been doing them for several years) make keeping snakes much more rewarding. I've tried the LAM method (sterile boxes, wood shavings, and a heat source) and it's not that much fun. It has it's place, but it should emphatically not be the approach employed by the average hobbyist. Allowing snakes a fairly large cage, with structures and possibly plants, appropriate to it's size and behavior, greatly enhances thier captive behavior. A boa constrictor can just sit in a 4X2X1 foot cage all day, with little to do, and live. Or, you can put it in a 4X2X3 cage with thick branches, places to explore, ect. and have a much more interesting captive. SOme of the book is common sense, some of it is fairly detailed, but for a novice keeper, it is a must have--and frankly, it's a good idea for many more advanced keepers. The approach advocated does have limits; truly large snakes (big boas, burmese, etc.) are not suited for planted tanks, because they crush anything smaller than a tree. Furthermore, I wish the book dealt with quasi-natural setups more--they're my preferred approach, and more flexible. You simply use wood shavings, or a burrowable mix of sand and soil, and structure large branches and rocks in the cage. No plants, true, so not as pretty, but provides much of the same stimulus and is easier by far. I also wish he dealt more with noctural displays; he mentions some ideas (i.e. use redlights) but he doesn't deal with ways to make truly amazing noctural displays--e.g. plants that flower at night, etc. But still, this book gives you info you will not get in any other avialable book for snakes. It also advocates an approach that makes keeping snakes truly much more pleasent. I heartily reccomend it for anyone, particularly new people, or people who use the LAM method and are burning out. It opens new ideas, better ideas.

At Last!!

Keeping snakes in plastic blanket boxes has its place in the warehouses of professional breeders but for the average keeper, we wonder why, after starting with a pair of snakes, we somehow become disillusioned and unsatisfied with them and move onto a different 'more advanced' species. Suddenly we find ourselves with corn snakes, kingsnakes, boas, green tree pythons and wonder, amid all the blanket boxes, why we ever started. The daily cleaning and feeding chores are only offset by the fact that we made a little money on the side by selling offspring. If you are thinking about owning a snake or are already drawn in the direction of purchasing more and more species - I would recommend this book above all others.
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