Well, the females have shorter tails than the males. The tail is from where they relieve themselves and down. Or, you check its sex organs.
Determining the sex of any snake is done by probing. Only let your vet or another experienced professional do this to avoid injuring the snake.
One easy way to tell visualy is that that males have longer, thicker tails. Males also have a pair of sex organs called hemipenes inside them which females don't have. Also, when snakes are young the hemipenes are more visual externally.
The best way I know of is to locate the cloaca of the snake. This is like a humans anus. Then take a probe or thin wire and slide it gently into the cloaca, towards the tail. If it goes down into the base of the tail, it is a male snake. If you insert the probe and it stops, its a female.
when she goes and has sex with the snake
boas and constrictors are the largest of snake species. if a snake is wider than your arm, it is most likely a boa
no
To determine the sex of a corn snake, you can use a technique called probing. This involves gently inserting a probe into the snake's vent to feel for the presence of hemipenes in males or the absence in females. It is important to have a professional demonstrate this technique to ensure accuracy and safety for the snake.
There is no way to do it. A vet must do sergery on it to determain it's sex. Which would put your snake through a lot of pain and could most likely kill it because of stress.
you tell me
they start molting
What does your gut tell you?
If you translate the lines on the whiteboard in the HQ it will tell you where the snake points are