chibiphonebooth wrote:But dude, i would so get a wallaby in a HEARTBEAT if they werent so expensive. i would much rather have a wallaby than a sugar glider. o.o
Tenshi no Ai wrote:Likewise. Letsee buying something that glides, or somethign you can pack things around in a pouch AND hops! ^^ Probably like over a thousand bucks though. I saw a ring tailed lemur in a pet store and it was 2,000 :/ But it was soooooo cute and liked to like your finger^^
Puritan wrote:A friend of the family owned a sugar glider, and from what I understand he really enjoyed having it. You really seem to want one, so I hope you're able to buy it, but be careful in thinking about bringing it to college. I know it can be hard to find a place that allows pets, and if you decide to live with roommates they would have to accept it too. My sister had to let her parrot live at home for a year when she came to college because she couldn't have a pet in the dorm. Now it lives a floor below me and hates me....but never mind.
ChristianRonin wrote:I think it's mean to keep a wallaby in captivity..O.o I mean..they live in Austrailia (as do these little Sugar Gliders) I don't think it's right to keep them as pets. I mean they are wild animals..
There is this petstore nearby that has this Toucan in it...a TOUCAN!
heh, no wonder our animals are all dying out...
Never be afraid to try something new. Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark. A large group of professionals built the Titanic. Dave Barry
bigsleepj wrote: Unfinished stories never leave you, nor do they fester. They only grow better, like wine locked away in a deep dark cellar, waiting for you to bottle it and bring it to the light.
Is it even legal for our marsupials to be sold in pet stores? They wouldn't be the easiest creatures to look after (many of our animals are quite unique and not made for house-hold living). I certainly agree they are cute, although we don't get them here, they like the tropics and bushlands higher up - parts of Queensland, parts of New South Wales etc
yeah I didn't mean to offend anyone... JUST Saying... they are from a whole 'nother continent...lol...
I say, Chibi if you really want one. go for it! NAME IT PIX!
Hey Chibi
I don’t want to sound condescending.
But I think you should go to the library and get some books on how to care for a sugar glider.
You should never buy a animal just because it’s cute.
And also even if you can come up with the money to buy the animal and the cage, you still have to have the money to care for it, the rest of it’s life.
You have to take it to the vet.
If it needs more food, or a new cage, or anything a sugar glider needs, you have to pay the $$.
I did some digging and found this
What follows is dietary advice from well known exotic animal veterinarian.
Dr. Johnson-Delaney Recommendations
Dr. Cathy Johnson-Delaney is an experienced exotic animal veterinarian and respected author and speaker. Her feeding recommendations are based on studies of the natural diets of sugar gliders designed in consultation with Australian zookeepers and veterinarians. The suggested amounts are per sugar glider, per day, fed in the evening. The amount should be adjusted depending on activity, size, reproduction, etc.
1 Tablespoon Leadbeater's Mix (recipe follows)
1 Tablespoon Zoo quality insectivore diet (e.g. Reliable Protein Products Insectivore Diet) , or insects. If using insects, variety is important (crickets, mealworms, waxworms, moths, spiders, etc), and the insects should be fed high quality food such as commercial cricket food, and dusted with a complete vitamin/mineral supplement.
treat: small amount of fruits, chopped together so the gliders can't just pick out ther favorites.
Leadbeater's Mix Recipe 150 ml Warm water
150 ml Honey
1 Shelled, boiled egg
25 grams high protein baby cereal
1 tsp vitamin/mineral supplement
Mix warm water and honey. Blend egg, then gradually add water/honey mixture. Then blend in vitamin powder until smooth, and then blend in baby cereal until smooth. Keep refrigerated until served.
Warrior 4 Jesus wrote:Is it even legal for our marsupials to be sold in pet stores? They wouldn't be the easiest creatures to look after (many of our animals are quite unique and not made for house-hold living). I certainly agree they are cute, although we don't get them here, they like the tropics and bushlands higher up - parts of Queensland, parts of New South Wales etc
Off topic - I want an echidna!
chibiphonebooth wrote:yeah, they are legal. if they werent...why would our pet store sell them? o.o
OMGOSHORZ I SO SHOULD!!!!!
oh no. i know about them and everything- i looked them up. im not that stupid to go buy an animal just cause its cute.
im not like that girl yesterday who just bought one on impulse. er well.. she special ordered it. >.>
that is stupid on her part.
but no- i researched and everything. some things may be a bit harder than i expected... but i can live with it. XD
ive always wanted an exotic pet though- from wallabies to platypuses.. etc. basically any furry animal in australia. XDDD
Never be afraid to try something new. Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark. A large group of professionals built the Titanic. Dave Barry
bigsleepj wrote: Unfinished stories never leave you, nor do they fester. They only grow better, like wine locked away in a deep dark cellar, waiting for you to bottle it and bring it to the light.
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