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Kuamata
12-31-14, 08:39 PM
So, my mother called me asking if I wanted a Central American Box Turtle with setup for free... I thought about it for a moment and said sure, why not? I mean, if it comes with set up, why not? Apparently one of her coworkers originally wanted to sell him and then decided she was just going to give him away instead. He's in a 10 gallon tank(way too small if he's an adult). Thankfully I have plenty of tanks laying around collecting dust, so.. I always keep 'em, never know when I'll need one.

Thing is, though... I can't find anything on Central American Box Turtles, I think she may of gotten confused with Central American Wood Turtles? I wish I had a picture, but I don't.

Sublimeballs
01-01-15, 10:15 AM
Post a pic up when you get a chance for identification. But my geuss is its going to be the native box turtle to your region. I hope you've got some money to put towards the little guy... Turtles and torts are on the higher end of the spectrum as far as expenses go. UVB lighting is a requirement( mercury vapor bulbs recomended, sunlight best), large caging(4'x2.5' minimum for sigle adult, outdoors housing is best), humidity and soaks are important. Turtles are alot of work and live a long time(box turtles can live 100+ years).

I'd advise you do some research and see if a box turtle is really a commitment you want to make. I've got a redfoot tortoise and ill tell you he's 100xs the amount of work of the rest of my animals.

Kuamata
01-01-15, 05:02 PM
Haha, you're talking to someone with parrots that live up to 100 years and cost a lot. I'm good. Commitment isn't a problem for me, just gotta make plans should I pass before them.

I do have an old 125g tank but the problem is, a tank of that size is hard to heat up, for one, super heavy, and hard to humidify... but yeah, UVB/UVA lighting because they don't consume whole prey. Already got that for our feathery ones for the winter months. It's too cold outside during this time. Got an aviary/kennel out back that our animals share. Of course, they don't go in at the same time. One group at a time. It's mostly the dog's right now because of the weather.

I'l be picking him up tomorrow, will post pics then. PS: the native here would be the Eastern... so dunno where she's getting Central American. When I hear that I think Mexico and those other countries between north and south america.

Minkness
01-01-15, 05:16 PM
Sounds like you pretty much got it together! Can't wait to see your new addition. ^_^

Kuamata
01-01-15, 06:29 PM
I just got sent this pic. Doesn't look like any box turtle I've ever seen... or he may be either really dirty or really dull from lack of UVB/UVA lighting.

http://i166.photobucket.com/albums/u119/kuamata/Mobile%20Uploads/2015-01-01191841_zps11537f7e.jpg

Minkness
01-01-15, 06:37 PM
Omg that has been in a 10 gallon tank?! I don't know much (aka anything) about turtles, but he looks like he would fill half the tank!

Also, may be some kind of gopher turtle? No idea, just throwing that out there.

Kuamata
01-01-15, 06:41 PM
Yeah, poor fella... Feel bad for him, bein' in a little tank all this time and now bein' tossed out like yesterday's news. We'll give him a nice big place, save up for some PVC tanks. I hear they're fairly lightweight, and they don't look too bad, either.

Minkness
01-01-15, 06:47 PM
Good luck on that and though he can't say it, I'll say it for him. Thank you ^_^

Kuamata
01-01-15, 06:48 PM
Lol~ As my fiance always says, I got a bleeding heart.

Edit: By the size I guess she's had him a few years... hard to say, though, she may of got him off craigslist or something or maybe he was found outside... but I guess it makes as much sense as people abandoning their parrots after living with them a few years... I never have or ever will understand people like that. I don't understand and how you can share your life with any living, breathing creature for years and then just turn around and sell it or give it away... I mean, I've had one of my cats since I was 7 years old and I just turned 23. :/ She's soooo healthy, I'll probably get to spend another 10 years with her, or I hope I do, at least.

Minkness
01-01-15, 06:54 PM
Same. When I had a house with some land I rescued horses regularly. Though I didn't keep them. I fixed them up, settled them down, and found fitting families for them. When I have my own land again I plan on starting that back up, and when I have more reptile experience, possibly opening a small reptile rescue as well since all the ones in this area are really just flippers asking for a profit from a sick animal. Uhg!

Sorry for the mini-rant lol

Kuamata
01-01-15, 07:03 PM
Haha, that's ok, I edited my last comment into a mini rant, lol. I've always said, if I had the money I'd start a parrot rescue, but that takes thousands and thousands. 'Ransoms' are usually high, as people want to 'recoup' what they spent on a baby or an older bird. They have a habit of pricing older ones for the price of a weaned baby, which is irritating. Then they want to throw on a cage fee... so a 15 year old Blue and Gold Macaw may end up with a $1,700+ 'rehome fee'. I call it a ransom. I see so many that need help, but I don't have the money for a 1000 dollar ransom on top of the vet fee for testing alone, to make sure they aren't carrying anything and aren't a risk to mine. Then lord forbid they have anything wrong, that could easily escalate to another 1000+. So, basically, when taking in a large parrot, for example, you better be prepared to spend up to 5,000 or more for everything... I know a lot of rescues heavily depend on donations, funds, etc. 'cause we all know money doesn't just grow on trees, and, you no, it's hard to say no when you come across one in a state of emergency.

There is one I've been following, breaks my heart... Can't imagine the kind of home this little baby must of been in. A little African Grey (lives 60+ years), only a year old... feathers all frazzled and mostly plucked out, one leg already has two breaks, one with a pin that should of been removed long ago, so know he's in constant pain because his hip is out of alignment as a result... fed wild bird sunflower seed (sunflower seeds are extremely unhealthy for them in high quantities and can even become an addiction and affect mental health)... I just can't fathom, who could be so careless to let their little one fall from such a height that it continuously breaks his leg? So careless as to drive this little baby to such a point of mental unhealthiness that he rips out his own feathers? He's only a baby for crying out loud, you usually don't see self destructive habits until 6+ years of age, and, even then, it's usually still a mental problem.

Minkness
01-01-15, 07:24 PM
Wow.....I all ways feel aweful when I see a half plucked bird but I'm just not a bird person. Especially the big parrots even though I think they are gorgeous and know the potential of sweetness and intelligence. However, I also know what I can handle and don't take on something I can't. I wish more people put as much thought into a new animal as we would, especially with animals that are true 'companions' like birds. =/

When I was much younger I volunteered to help a woman that had a nice outdoor aviary. 10 pairs of mated hyacinth macaws and several other large parrots I can't remember the breeds of. She had some red and green ones, peach/pinks, yellow, soooooo many! She even had an aussie black swan (which hated everyone and I called it the attack swan since it basically protected the aviary lol), so I know the time and care birds take, and every time I helped with them, I was so happy to leave lol. Other than her breeding pairs, all the others were rescues. I had no idea what her bills were though since I just helped to feed, clean, and handle them.

Kuamata
01-01-15, 07:55 PM
Holy crap! Was she rich?! One Hyacinth alone costs $12,000, or a pair will cost that much, and a Black Swan cygnet will cost a few thousand in America, too. I'd love to have a little girl named Monroe, one day~ For now I'm happy with my Emblem Goose, Angel. I personally love my rescues more than my babies (but don't tell them that). I guess it's because they're already adults and set in their ways, where as my babies are prone to possibly changing when they hit maturity in 3-5 years.

I have three macaws (looking to adopt another as a friend for my older boy, as he doesn't get along with my two babies and I don't believe it's healthy for a bird to not have a friend of the same type), 2 cockatoos (one is happier with us rather than the others), and 1 amazon (he buddies up with the more independent cockatoo). Also have a cockatiel and English budgie who is huuuge and beautiful~ Yeah, I'm the crazy bird lady but I wouldn't have it any other way. After we adopt the Scarlet Macaw I'm building a relationship with, assuming she chooses me, I told my fiance, noooo more dogs cats or birds for a loooooong time. Snakes are ok though.

Minkness
01-01-15, 08:02 PM
I honestly have NO idea where she got her money. When I found her she was in her late 70s suffering from pretty bad arthritis. I took lessons in horse riding and horsemanship from her in exchange for cleaning stalls and feeding the horses. I helped in the aviary because I liked spending time with her and saw she needed help. She was a little old lady who had a few acres of land and a tiny cottage (I think the aviary was bigger than her house lol). What I do remember was that when she was much younger, she competed in the olympics for the equines. That's what she told me anyway. I have never been one to follow horse famous people so wouldn't know otherwise, but if she was, it would explain how she had that money I guess. Either way, it was an experience I wouldn't trade for the world. She was a wonderful woman and taught me many things in the year or so I work with her. However, then I moved out if state and lost touch. Tried to find her stables through the net, but nothing ever shows and she wasn't exactly tech savy to begin with. But boy was knowing her and working with her an adventure!

Kuamata
01-01-15, 08:22 PM
I bet! I would of looooooved working with all those amazing critters.

Minkness
01-01-15, 08:30 PM
Yup! She also had a koi pond I helped baracade from the racoons and herens lol

She lived in FL on about..3-5 acres I wanna say. It wasn't as much land as she probably should have had, but she made up for it with 2 riding areas, a turn out area that was really just hars ground, no grass, but every horse had their own run so they weren't in their own run. The breeding macaws had cages bug enough to fly in, and the others had pretty bug cages as well, but she also let them take turns being out in the aviary to socialize and get some good fly time. Anyone who needed nursing was kept in her home.

Sooooo much on so little land. Blows my mind just remembering it lol.

Kuamata
01-01-15, 11:00 PM
Ahhh, FL is where most parrot breeders are. Sounds like she was living my dream.~ I hope to one day own a farm and have a huge 30 ft dome for my babies to fly in, with chickens, geese, etc. Would love to have a retic or two, a monitor or two, love me some hognoses, would love to have a few morphs or other sbakes, like a magpie or ivory blood python or a jungle jag carpet... also like the diamond.. jag? carpets. Can't remember the mix. Would also love a coatimundi. Also been wanting to start up with either parrot breeding or opossum breeding. I'm working on getting my permit so I can educate the public about opossums and their benefits to the environment, myths, and other facts. :)

Jim Smith
01-02-15, 08:55 AM
Back on topic; I agree with the others that does not look like a box turtle. One character of a box turtle is that they can close the shell up completely. They have "hinges" on the lower part of the shell (plastron). This allows them to withdraw completely into their shell and close the plastron sealing them in - hence the name Box Turtle. You might check to see if your turtle has these "hinges". If not, then you'll know that it is not a Box Turtle and you'll have a better idea of the care and housing it needs.

Zoo Nanny
01-02-15, 11:42 AM
There is one I've been following, breaks my heart... Can't imagine the kind of home this little baby must of been in. A little African Grey (lives 60+ years), only a year old... feathers all frazzled and mostly plucked out, one leg already has two breaks, one with a pin that should of been removed long ago, so know he's in constant pain because his hip is out of alignment as a result... fed wild bird sunflower seed (sunflower seeds are extremely unhealthy for them in high quantities and can even become an addiction and affect mental health)... I just can't fathom, who could be so careless to let their little one fall from such a height that it continuously breaks his leg? So careless as to drive this little baby to such a point of mental unhealthiness that he rips out his own feathers? He's only a baby for crying out loud, you usually don't see self destructive habits until 6+ years of age, and, even then, it's usually still a mental problem.

Rico had surgery on the 30th and returned to E.A.S.T. At this point they are waiting for the fracture to heal in the lower leg and then will go in and remove the pin from the hip. If you are on Facebook you can follow his updates on Exotic Avian Sanctuary of Tennessee's page. He is in the care of an amazing lady, Kim who runs the rescue.

Kuamata
01-02-15, 05:19 PM
Rico had surgery on the 30th and returned to E.A.S.T. At this point they are waiting for the fracture to heal in the lower leg and then will go in and remove the pin from the hip. If you are on Facebook you can follow his updates on Exotic Avian Sanctuary of Tennessee's page. He is in the care of an amazing lady, Kim who runs the rescue.

That's the one :) I've been watching him on Facebook. I hope he finds an amazing forever home after it's all said and done.

I'l check for hinges when I pick him up. Currently visiting an avian rescue right now to work on my relations hip with this girl, I'll be picking him up in about 1 or 2 hours and will be able to get better pictures.

Minkness
01-02-15, 05:21 PM
Can't wait to see =)

Cmwells90
01-02-15, 06:24 PM
[QUOTE=Kuamata;945607]Currently visiting an avian rescue right now to work on my relations hip with this girl,QUOTE]

Ohhh.... it's breeding season already O.o haha JK!

Kuamata
01-02-15, 07:11 PM
Haha lol! I guess I could have worded that better, lmfao. I meant the Scarlet Macaw. Just took pics, uploading them, gonna post as soon as I pick up supplies he came with from my mother. It'l give me a good idea of the care he got. I'm afraid he probably did not get nearly the husbandry he was supposed to, but I'll go into detail in the new thread.