I want to hear from the people with pets like centipedes, prarie dogs, alligators, scorpions, vultures, octupus… What is taking care of your pet like?

  • Devi@kbin.social
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    8 months ago

    I have a few and have had more in the past, but my current most interesting I think are mourning geckos. They’re a little gecko and when they were found in the rainforest the researchers realised they were all female, so assumed some dreadful disease had killed off all the males and called them ‘mourning geckos’ as they were mourning all their husbands and would die alone.

    Turns out nope, they don’t need men, they’re independent women, they lay fertile eggs through parthenogenesis, who are also female.

  • PonyOfWar@pawb.social
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    8 months ago

    Had stick insects for a while. Very easy to care for. In fact kind of too easy, as the main challenge is to stop them from rapidly multiplying in number. They can also procreate asexually, just cloning themselves over and over.

  • Seleni@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Five ball pythons; two Normals (Monty and Lucky) one Super Mojave (Hisui), one Jigsaw (Amber), one Mystic Spider (Jasper). And two Leopard Geckos (Spot and Rover).

    And anyone who tells you reptiles don’t have personality is lying. Jasper is very snobbish and a homebody, Hisui is a coward but tries to be brave, Monty is laid-back and lazy, Amber is adventurous, and Lucky is very gung-ho (and food obsessed, because his previous owners starved him, then dumped him on the side of the road).

    Rover is very confident, and Spot is a grumpy old man.

  • PerogiBoi@lemmy.ca
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    8 months ago

    I had 2 fancy rats. They were lovely. They liked to play around in boxes and carve tunnels into my couch to run around in. They liked fruits and riding around in my pocket.

    My monster of a roommate at the time took them and let them into the wild when I was away. I never saw them again. Should have left her in the wild as well for that.

    • moreeni@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      Gosh, how could anybody let their roommate’s pets into the wild? I’m so sorry that it happenned to you

  • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    There’s a hawk in my yard that likes me. When I walk out, it flies to the nearest fence and waits for me to comfort/feed it, like a dog who had just realized its dinner has just been poured.

  • atlasraven31@lemm.eeOP
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    8 months ago

    I had 4 Madagascar hissing cockroaches for several years. They are docile (female) to feisty (male). As long as they have plants to eat, things to hide in, and water to drink, they’re good. Mine seemed to especially love eating slightly damp rose petals.

  • Eufalconimorph@discuss.tchncs.de
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    8 months ago

    Budgerigars (small parrots).

    They’re active, smart, and social. They fly.

    So I made them a flight cage that takes up most of the room they’re in. I’d prefer a full walk-in aviary, but don’t have room in my apartment.

    Cleaning isn’t bad, I just shop-vac out the litter tray & refill it with a 20lb bag of corn cob bits. Fresh food in the mornings, take it out & replace with pellets around noon. Clean water daily. Millet treats when I let them out (about an hour per day to interact with them).

    Feathers get everywhere when they molt. And feather dust. Their room has its own HEPA filter.

    Vet appointments are more expensive for exotics than cats & dogs. There are fewer exotic vets, and I always go to a board certified avian vet. Boarding when I go on vacation is also more expensive (about $50/day), especially since they’re flighted.

    They’re not anywhere near as loud or destructive as larger parrots, but that doesn’t mean they’re quiet. Just means they might not damage your hearing from the next room. They wake up with the dawn, and let you know about it.

    They’re extremely sensitive to airborne toxins (avian respiration is rather different from mammalian). That means absolutely no teflon cookware use, no air fresheners, etc.

  • lol3droflxp@kbin.social
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    8 months ago

    4 species of roaches (Pseudoglomeris magnifica being the prettiest in my opinion), 3 species of isopods (Merulanella sp. scarlet being my favourite) and 2 species of beetles as well as shrimp and snails in an aquarium.

  • aperson@beehaw.org
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    8 months ago

    I have a hedgehog. He’s very easy to take care of. They naturally litter train, so cleaning up after him is super easy.

  • Extras@lemmy.today
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    8 months ago

    Not me but an old friend of mine had a red eared slider. It looked god awful to take care of it. He had like a giant plastic tank, think its called a stock tank or something, which took like at least 1/4 of their room space. Then there was another big box filled with sand and dirt that he said was for eggs since apparently they just lay them whenever. He probably slept great though since all you heard was the filter whenever you walked in. Not sure how long it took to clean the giant tank but I can only imagine it must of taken hours.

  • RampageDon@lemmy.ml
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    8 months ago

    I used to have 2 sugar gliders. Very high maintenance pets. They are very social and will get depressed without enough attention. They are also group animals and when you get them you adapt them to your scent as the “home tree”. This means you being gone for let’s say a vacation or something will stress them out to the extreme. Since they are basically wild animals they have a very strict diet you also need to maintain, on top of them being picky eaters, can’t really give them the same food more than 2 days in a row or they won’t eat it. They often take a bite or two of food before throwing it and going for a new piece.
    All that being said they can be very fun and loving animals. They live a long time and are quite smart. Their little hands look like people’s thumbs and all and they LOVE untying knots and anything plastic that crinkles. Had them through college and had a tapestry on every wall so it was fun letting them run around the apartment free and climbing where ever. Always a good laugh when someone was over and didn’t know they were out. They would lead across the room to get back to me or the cage and seeing someone freak out as they saw something dive bombing them out of their peripheral never got old. My favorite thing about them was this demonic noise called crabbing that they make when they are scared or upset.

  • DeltaTangoLima@reddrefuge.com
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    8 months ago

    Blue tongue lizard - they’re pretty easy to take care of (so far - we’ve only had it about a month). We’re still learning what it likes to eat, but their diet is pretty varied, so there’s always an option in the fridge - strawberries, lettuce, banana, etc.

    It’s been pretty reclusive, and even a little cranky, since we brought it home. It’s started hissing at us when we try to pick it up. Talking to the people at the store, I think we need to “force” it to get used to being held, so that’ll be this weekend’s fun activity.

    That said, experiencing other domestic blue tongue lizards, they’re pretty chill pets.

        • boogetyboo@aussie.zone
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          8 months ago

          I’ve fed the wild ones snails as they seem to think they’re pretty awesome. Would that be an option for domestic? Or do you run the risk of giving them whatever diseases wild snails have that they may not have a built immunity to? I suppose the possibility a snail has been poisoned is a risk too…

          I think I’ve just answered my own question. Thanks for observing my stream of consciousness.

          • DeltaTangoLima@reddrefuge.com
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            8 months ago

            Well, I don’t put snail poison in my backyard, and I doubt snails are covering great distances after eating poison elsewhere, so they’re probably reasonably safe. I’ve already fed it crickets I’ve caught in my yard without any issues.

  • McLoud@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    My girlfriend has a shaved beaver. It’s pretty easy to take care of, just feed it some wood every so often.