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Yes they are! If you live in a apartment or a small space, a Kenyan sand boa (if you have a really small space, then get a male) is an excellent choice. They are fairly not too expensive (counts on the morph and sometimes even gender) and are fairly docile snakes, but hog noses are great choices too for a small living space.
There is nothing in sand that will make plants grow.
It's possible to reverse the change. All you need to do is seperate the sand and the soil. No chemical bonds were altered or anything.
We're having trouble trying to decide where to start. -- There is no such thing as a "cubic ton". -- If you want to know the volume of sand, it'll be a cubic unit of length. If you want to know the weight of sand, it'll be a unit of force (or weight). -- "8 inches by forty feet" is an area ... a space on a flat surface ... and can't hold anything. -- In order to figure out how much water or sand something can hold, you need a third measurement. -- Even after you know the volume of the space you need to fill, if you want the weight of sand, then you still need to know the weight of some unit volume of sand, like maybe the "pounds of sand per cubic foot". (None of this response should be misconstrued to suggest that we are in any way telling you to go pound sand.)
Any plant will grow in the sand if it is watered (mechanically, if need be) according to the plants needs. If you mean "what herbs grow in the sand naturally?" .... I have seen Datura aka jimsonweed grow in the sand... of course there are lots of herbs on this list. Also, did you mean medicinal herbs?
dessert
20 years or longer
10 gallons (for a small female or a male) or 20 gallons (for a full grown female
Yes. Sand boas are vertebrates as are all snakes.
I wouldn't recommend them - since they spend the vast majority of their lives in burrows. Having said that - they are (apparently) one of the more docile snake species.
I believe the smallest boa is the Kenyan Sand Boa (males average 1-1.5ft.) and the largest boa is the Green Anaconda (25ft. set the record). These are the biggest not the longest snakes (longest is the Reticulated python).
I say that some types of birds eat Sand Boas
yes apparently any kind of boa chokes and their all related to an anacondaEDIT: No, not in the stereotypical sense. Sand boas (I imagine you are referring to the Kenyan sand boa) max out around 2 ft. and don't have the stereotypical widened jaw. My sand boa is a 3 year old male that just reached 1 1/2 ft.
yes apparently any kind of boa chokes and their all related to an anacondaEDIT: No, not in the stereotypical sense. Sand boas (I imagine you are referring to the Kenyan sand boa) max out around 2 ft. and don't have the stereotypical widened jaw. My sand boa is a 3 year old male that just reached 1 1/2 ft.
Yes they are! If you live in a apartment or a small space, a Kenyan sand boa (if you have a really small space, then get a male) is an excellent choice. They are fairly not too expensive (counts on the morph and sometimes even gender) and are fairly docile snakes, but hog noses are great choices too for a small living space.
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I just got bit by one on the finger this morning. It left two tiny holes that bled. Two holes on the top and two almost holes on the bottom of my finger. The teeth marks were close together. Not the normal scratched multi-hole appearance that you get from a regular boa bite.