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05-01-05, 05:25 PM
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#16
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Member
Join Date: Apr-2005
Location: Midland , Ontario
Age: 41
Posts: 9
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hey guys i was reading some of the food items you give your lizards and to me it all sounds the same (make sure it is clean) "parasite free" so some ppl are saying dont feed them feeder goldfish bc they could have parasites and say to feed the lizard grasshoppers/locust ... well guess what Clams,crawfish,catipillers,grasshopers can all have parasites too so should i ignore what what has been said and just feed him what he seems to like? .... that would be a good show feeding my albig a scorpian.
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05-02-05, 02:48 AM
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#17
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Member
Join Date: Sep-2003
Location: California
Posts: 355
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A woman in 1999 wrote an article on albigularis and scorpion feeding, and even sent me a photograph of it - locusts and all those animals have parasites and bacteria etc, but Varanus eat carrion and that is disgusting, so dont you think a few germs would be ok? I do.
Goldfish are nasty and have salmonella and you want to avoid the potentially lethal pathogen 'germs', like salmonella and pseudomona, and cryptosproidium, and Haemgrarines (reptilian malaria), trympanosomiasis, etc...
markb
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05-02-05, 07:52 AM
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#18
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Member
Join Date: Jan-2003
Location: Boston, MA
Posts: 240
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Just to clarify my earlier comments *slightly* (I completely forgot to even look for the source which listed specific times) a lot of shellfish that you'd be considering as a potential food source are detritus feeders, they live off all kinds of unpleasant things; many of which have already passed through the digestive systems of other animals once or twice. They're pretty loaded with parasites and bacteria that would represent varying degrees of risk to your captive animals...
The digestive expulsion was a longer process than would be addressed by running them under some tap water for a few minutes. I'm going to hesitantly say that most of them were someplace within the twenty four-forty eight hour range; meaning they should be kept in sterile conditions for that length of time to help lessen the chances of transmitting anything nasty.
__________________
-Seamus Haley
"Genes, Like Leibnitz's monads, have no windows; the higher properties of life are emergent... And once assembled, organisms have no windows." - Edward Wilson, Sociobiology
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05-02-05, 10:38 AM
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#19
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Member
Join Date: Nov-2002
Location: Toronto
Age: 43
Posts: 1,405
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Buying them from grocery stores @ a cheap price reduces that risk I'am sure.
I'd never be comfortable finding any type of shellfish nearby and feeding it off. The area is far too "city" like.
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05-02-05, 12:43 PM
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#20
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Please Email Boots
Join Date: Mar-2005
Posts: 3,326
Country:
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Wow a thread where I actually learned something, instead of look at todays cute pic of my gecko!
Hey Mark I have noticed that with my savs (They obviously were not feed a very good diet before I got them) that they see a food item that is new to them and they pretty much have to sit there and think about it for awhile and then they decide they can eat it. I would have thought they would smell it then decide it's food and eat it. But they sniff it, poke at it and look at it from a couple of angles. Then decide to eat it. It took one 10 minutes of investagation to decide mice were ok and an hour for a headless fish. The other still takes an hour to eat anything besides crickets.
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05-02-05, 03:34 PM
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#21
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Member
Join Date: Sep-2003
Location: California
Posts: 355
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HAHAHA - dont you love it! They are pondering, "Can I eat that?" and then 'learn' they can..... you should have seen the reaction of my 2 meter White-throat when she saw my tongue - she tongue flicked my face for 30 minutes trying to figure out what it was - I would tongue flick and she stared at me, at it for so long = hilarious! They do learn, and its amazing to watch...no, we did not kiss - you perverts! (kap, vhb....) hahaha.
markb
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05-02-05, 03:50 PM
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#22
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Member
Join Date: Apr-2005
Location: Midland , Ontario
Age: 41
Posts: 9
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LOL i would want to keep my tongue i think it would be more then a french kiss if that lizard grabed it lol. and i tryed my albig on earth worms today and he loved them it was so funny i placed two one the ground he looked at them licked it then bombed in grabed it then was swinging it around the cage then he saw the other one moveing and nailed that one two with the other still in his mouth so if you can picture 2 big worms hanging out his mouth swinging them around if was too funny at least now he seems alot more active.
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05-02-05, 04:19 PM
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#23
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Member
Join Date: Apr-2005
Location: Midland , Ontario
Age: 41
Posts: 9
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Crap i got of the topic :P sry
so i should be ok if i get grasshoppers and clams, worms,crayfish ect.. as long as they are store bought and just take caution and clean them anyways and have any of you guys tryed shrimp? or lobster? i know it can be a bit much money but hey it is for my albig after all
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05-02-05, 06:07 PM
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#24
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Member
Join Date: Mar-2004
Location: Bama
Age: 61
Posts: 233
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No perverted thoughts here Mark, I know for a fact, albigs are too smart to kiss that ugly mug.
Scott
__________________
Do not meddle in the affairs of Dragons, for you are crunchy and tatse good with ketchup
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05-02-05, 06:32 PM
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#25
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Please Email Boots
Join Date: Mar-2005
Posts: 3,326
Country:
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LOL Scott!
I am totally going to try the clam thing on Wednesday when I can check a few seafood places. I wish we had those large grasshoppers (locust) here I would love to see my tegu chase one around. I have never seen a quicker lizard. Not to friendly either.
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05-02-05, 08:42 PM
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#26
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Member
Join Date: Sep-2003
Location: California
Posts: 355
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If you 'got crabs' - try those too! Crabs always taste good - even the ones not on your gf! hahaha
markb
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05-03-05, 11:14 AM
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#27
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Member
Join Date: Apr-2005
Location: Midland , Ontario
Age: 41
Posts: 9
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LMAO!!!
Ill try some store bought crabs lol
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05-03-05, 11:48 AM
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#28
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Member
Join Date: Sep-2003
Location: California
Posts: 355
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These shellfish items should be offered as supplements, as 'snacks' or treats and not necessarily the primary diet - cockroaches and grasshoppers, and hopper mouse here or there is good for that regimen.
markb
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05-03-05, 12:34 PM
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#29
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Member
Join Date: Nov-2002
Location: Toronto
Age: 43
Posts: 1,405
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Haha Mark! I didnt think perversion! i thought more of pyschotic! lol, If i put my face to my whitethroats id probably lose a nice chunk of it hahaha!! Must have been a real docile whitethroat? Even my most docile I think would take a "Can I eat this" bite!
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05-04-05, 01:53 AM
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#30
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Member
Join Date: Sep-2003
Location: California
Posts: 355
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this female white-throat was docile, unless you were a bird or trout or crayfish which she enjoyed to eat - she did not like mice, and sometimes just crushed them and spit them out, and looked at me for more tastier food.
When she 'realized' I had a tongue you could see her 'cerebral gears' moving inside - it was hilarious to see her reaction. She was tame providing I did not pick her lard *** up - she was always calm and never bit me intentionally - BUT she did salvo me with quarts of crap everytime I picked her up for more than 5 minutes - and I lost alot of shirts/pants that way....not to say she was a 'lady' at all - I saw her commit murder of two occassions to other monitors - I was cleaning cages, did cage shift for 15 minutes = she murdered two nile monitors, crushing their heads and walked away...
markb
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