Quote:
Originally posted by dylan2b
He is being housed properly now, but the pet store I got him from is quite unsanitary. He was being housed in a 20 gal. tank with another burm, 2 retics, and two bloods, all of equal size. The substrate was little pebbles, and the water was not fresh.
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LOL.... It's early for me. I misread your post and thought YOU were housing the burm with 4 other snakes in a 20g tank!! I had already written 5 (angry) paragraphs before I figured out what was going on! LOL
Anyway, that is a pretty sick pet store!

The burm was obviously not being fed properly and it is likely dehydrated as well. Just make sure it has access to a warm spot of around 90-92F, fresh water at ALL times and I would feed it slightly under-sized meals frequently (1x the girth of the snake every 4 days or so). Just make sure you leave the snake alone and let it settle in. If it's keeping the meals down, feed it nice and steady for the first month or so and then try to get some of the weight put back on the poor thing.
You can also try forcing some clear Pedialite into the belly of the feeders it's eating just to get a little more liquid into the burm if it's not drinking much. OR, if you and the snake are up to it, you could syringe feed some Pedialite to the snake every few days. If you are interested/capable of doing that, someone here can give you step by step instructions.
Best of luck. I hope you can get this snake back on track...
P.S. I've never owned a burm before but I've had sick/dehydrated snakes before and that is what I would do in your situation... for what it's worth.