Good afternoon, all.
I guess I'm supposed to introduce myself and the menagerie here. Name is Laura, married to Erik, and we currently have 13 reptiles, not including the eggs in the incubator.
For the two of us, it started with a pair of rescued Bearded Dragons, which through a crazy twist of fate, we've come to know one of their original owners and have learned the male is from a now-extinct bloodline...which in Beardie terms means nothing. But extinct no longer; they're the ones providing us with the eggs.
After that was a stowaway house gecko who came by way of new luggage shipped up from a Saks Fifth Avenue in New Mexico (of all places) and was to small to sell legally, so we got him for free.
Our 2-year old Sulcata was obtained that day also, from the same pet store. Sig was bedded down on mulch and fed Romaine. We're working to correct what that resulted in. His ditzy, blonde disposition we're also hoping he'll outgrow.
The two Mali male Uromastyx and one Saharan female Uromastyx were next (would you believe a male and the female bred and produced hatchlings?! Twice!), followed by a CraigsList rescue, the "4 year-old Sulcata" for $25. She turned out to not be a Sulcata but a Hermanns, necessitating yet another giant sandbox (they're not really in sand...) and another animal conditioned to a very crappy diet.
Then came the male Panther chameleon, and the male Veiled chameleon, then the Jackson pair of chameleons (purchase, rescue, trade respectively).
Last is our newest Hermanns...a male. Both Hermanns are actually posted over in the Hermanns section as Erik and I are stumped over whether they're Dalmation or Eastern Hermanns.
This largely desert-menagerie lives with us just north of Detroit, a terrible climate for most of them and our 70+ cacti and succulents. We really need to move southwest and plant a large garden with deep fences. Or buy the Belle Isle Conservatory from the idiotic city of Detroit and throw everybody in there...
Great to be here. While the chameleons are more my husband's style, the tortoises charm me endlessly! And so while the chameleons won't live more than 4 or 5 years, the tortoises, well-cared for, will have 8 to 15 decades on the them. So I need all the help I can get making sure they get there.
I guess I'm supposed to introduce myself and the menagerie here. Name is Laura, married to Erik, and we currently have 13 reptiles, not including the eggs in the incubator.
For the two of us, it started with a pair of rescued Bearded Dragons, which through a crazy twist of fate, we've come to know one of their original owners and have learned the male is from a now-extinct bloodline...which in Beardie terms means nothing. But extinct no longer; they're the ones providing us with the eggs.
After that was a stowaway house gecko who came by way of new luggage shipped up from a Saks Fifth Avenue in New Mexico (of all places) and was to small to sell legally, so we got him for free.
Our 2-year old Sulcata was obtained that day also, from the same pet store. Sig was bedded down on mulch and fed Romaine. We're working to correct what that resulted in. His ditzy, blonde disposition we're also hoping he'll outgrow.
The two Mali male Uromastyx and one Saharan female Uromastyx were next (would you believe a male and the female bred and produced hatchlings?! Twice!), followed by a CraigsList rescue, the "4 year-old Sulcata" for $25. She turned out to not be a Sulcata but a Hermanns, necessitating yet another giant sandbox (they're not really in sand...) and another animal conditioned to a very crappy diet.
Then came the male Panther chameleon, and the male Veiled chameleon, then the Jackson pair of chameleons (purchase, rescue, trade respectively).
Last is our newest Hermanns...a male. Both Hermanns are actually posted over in the Hermanns section as Erik and I are stumped over whether they're Dalmation or Eastern Hermanns.
This largely desert-menagerie lives with us just north of Detroit, a terrible climate for most of them and our 70+ cacti and succulents. We really need to move southwest and plant a large garden with deep fences. Or buy the Belle Isle Conservatory from the idiotic city of Detroit and throw everybody in there...
Great to be here. While the chameleons are more my husband's style, the tortoises charm me endlessly! And so while the chameleons won't live more than 4 or 5 years, the tortoises, well-cared for, will have 8 to 15 decades on the them. So I need all the help I can get making sure they get there.