MouseKilla:
I would like to adress a couple points you made:
1)
Quote:
I don't believe for a second that anyone researches their first herp, let alone for a period of years before getting into the hobby. That just doesn't make sense so I don't believe it.
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When I first became interested in herps, I had to convince parents(very hard job) to allow me to get one. My father swore there would never be a herp in his house. Over the next TWO years, I did research to show my parents about herps, and learned more myself about how to care for them. My father finnally did reasearch himself for 5 months before he said it was ok for me to get a snake. Then I did research on corn/rat snakes for two months, and for my 10th birthday(YES I WAS THAT YOUNG AND ACTUALLY CARED ABOUT THE ANIMALS), got an everglades rat snake. It was actually sold to me from the store as a striped corn snake. Anyways, point made, people do research.
2) Throughout this thread, not just by you, but by others, was made mention that with herps, people cannot just go out and by a herp without the knowledge like any other animal(Ie: dog, cat, rodent, fish).
This is completely false. You do need knowledge before you go out and puchase any of these animals! It is completly incorrect to keep a golfish in a fishbowl and rarely change its water. You need to know something about the type of dog or cat you are buying such as amount of exercise and nutritional requirements and the type of food it can eat, does it shed? Are you alegic to it? Rodents need proper caging, food(very specific diets depending on the animal), what kind of substrate can you use? Birds need special cage and cages too. What kind of temperatures can any of your animals tolerate? Also, the point I find most important, if you even care about the animal, if you want it to be well/happy, YOU SHOULD LOOK INTO WHAT IT NEEDS TO LIVE, or else you will have an unhealthy, sad, suffering, ect... animal.
I understand if an animals is just droped at your door for whatever reason(previous owner is dumb, didnt care about it, didnt know how to care for it, animal/s was agressive, but as stated by Tony(BOAS N PYTHONS), you should have at least 1hr to research what you need to know on the animal, be it you go to a bookstore(Chapters?)(I do find great information about animals in books they sell), the internet(if you are posting on this site, it MUST be available to you), talking to people, find a book at a pet store, a magazine.
I truly belive if the person does really care about the animals they have, they should do some research on its care requirements.
My post was not intended as an attack on anyone or their statements, simply my knowledge/understanding on the topic.
I do congratulate the starter of the thread for at least having the sense to ask about the animal. At least from what they are told by the followup posts they will not do this again with another animal(hopefully).
I also believe that part of the problem is the sellers fault, as they are not assuring the animal/s are going to good homes, or that the person knows what they are doing.
Thank-you for your time in reading my posts, and again I did not mean to offend/attack anyone. Please, if you feel like, take my post apart and show me my mistakes, I will argue them with the facts and knowledge I posses.
Just my 2 cents.
C.
Edit: Just noticed the two above posts came up at the same time as mine, and I must agree with everything Tim said.
C.