They don't carry their eggs, when it comes time they lay their eggs.
If it's your first snake - the corn snake is the easiest to care for. The Boa WILL grow big (up to 12 feet !) and the Royal (ball) Python can be a fussy eater.
It depends really on how much it eats, and what type of corn snake it is. As an example - I have adult Corn snakes in my collection - that measure 5 inches around their body (circumference not diameter !)
Not usually, either big frog eats little snake or big snake eats little frog. Not recommended.
Not necessarily. The term chicken snake can refer to several species of snake. The corn snake is one of them.
medium corn snake:sub adult , adult corn snake:adult
yes a hatchling corn snake can go in a vivarium with an adult corn snake but only if the adult corn is very tame and feed well and there needs to be lots of hiding places for the hatchling corn snake to hide about 5 hides
The length of a Corn snake can be up to 72 inches.
If you want to have baby corns your female corn need to hibernate. Reason is simple, female corns have big job(to bring babys to the world). Anyway you can put your male to hibernate too.
Rat snakes are generally black whereas corn snakes are orangey yellowy and look like ground up corn.
Ask around on Kingsnake.com or a corn snake forum.
go and ask a vet if your corn snake is OK.