What's this? Identity crisis.

mike taylor

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Don't hibernate it this year . It's good to keep a new tortoise up for the first winter in a new place . If its sick or something else is wrong you need time to check him out . Soak it daily in warm water for fifteen minutes a day . They eat grasses, weeds, and cactus . I would start a new thread in the desert tortoise section and make the head line care for new desert tortoise . You'll get more of a response . I wish I could help you more but I don't keep these guys .
 

Momof4

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Welcome!! Please don't leave and Google!! All your care needs are here!
You're going to have fun setting up his enclosure and enjoy raising him!
 

Jacqui

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See David if you was like Jacqui she would've moved my post down one . Haha I'm not up on the laws on keeping California torts so just put it out there . If the first owner had papers do they go with the tort or does new owner have to do it again? If they have to get new papers then how do the wild life office keep up with the numbers of tortoises?

Ummm do not!! :p
 

Jacqui

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Lucky you and lucky tortoise. I just love his eyes I that first picture. :)
 

Yvonne G

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See David if you was like Jacqui she would've moved my post down one . Haha I'm not up on the laws on keeping California torts so just put it out there . If the first owner had papers do they go with the tort or does new owner have to do it again? If they have to get new papers then how do the wild life office keep up with the numbers of tortoises?

A new keeper sends in a new permit application, noting the old number and asking for a transfer.

(And dmmj is just as qualified to answer these desert tortoise questions as I, but thanks for the vote of confidence)
 

ActionCatt

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Wow I'm overwhelmed by the awesome responses, thank you all for taking the time to answer my questions.

I took him to the vet, who says it might be a "her" because the tail is tiny and the bottom of the shell is flat. But it's still very young, apparently. Also I had it scanned for a microchip just in case my neighbor forgot to mention it had been registered to her. Negative.. It's paperless, too. I suppose I'll get started with the permit application.

One more question, it's sitting in a temporary enclosure, which is a large crate, in the sun, and it's chosen to hide in the shade and go to sleep. During the day.. Is it trying to hibernate? We have a beautiful 78 degrees today in southern California..
 

Ciri

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She is a beautiful tortoise. it's hard to say whether she is trying to hibernate. It's quite possible. You know whether she was in hibernation when your neighbor brought her over? In any case, we are weeks away from spring, so there wouldn't be much time left to hibernate anyway.

You asked about tortoise care:
The Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum has excellent info compiled by reptile specialist veterinarian who has cared for the museums desert tortoises for 35 years:

http://www.desertmuseum.org/programs/tap_tortcare.php

the San Diego Turtle and Tortoise Society is a great organization:

http://www.sdturtle.org/public_documents/sdtts_goodandbadgardenplants.pdf#!care-sheets/c217k

This is a brochure listing lots of really healthy native foods for desert tortoises:
http://www.azgfd.gov/w_c/tortoise/documents/NativePlantsforDesertTortoises_2008.pdf

a good source of seeds (they even have a desert tortoise wildflower mix):
http://shop.nativeseeds.org/pages/seeds

I hope this helps.

Good luck with your desert tortoise.
 

dmmj

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I imagine the tortoise is trying to regulate it's temp, in a box, it can over heat quickly even in 78 degree weather.
 

smc

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A picture of the tail would be the best bet. My Pebble was though to be a girl until his growth spurt; looked just like yours. Now he's BIG with horns and glands. Give him/her a yard where you can let the wild field grass and mallows grow - they love that better than store-bought veggies. Pebble goes nuts over prickly pear fruit.
10629464_704878439586309_1161432944073757713_o.jpg
 

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