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#1
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Alternate pets
Besides dogs, cats, and maybe ferrets (or mongooses in the other hemisphere) what animals could be made pets? My father/uncles once had a pet raccoon, is this a possible major pet? Would otters or foxes be breedable into domesticatable versions? How about squirrels? Hedgehogs? I know some are kept as pets, could they hit the big time? Opossums? Any other suggestions?
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#2
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I understand sloths make excellent pets, though apparently they don't do much. |
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#3
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Foxes might be do-able. I remember a documentary from a few years back that featured the breeding program mentioned here:
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#4
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AHP:
I was just wondering. Also, I post more threads after an outage, cause there's more "room" on the Discussion Board. |
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#5
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Miniature pigs, horses, llamas etc.
Martens Paradise birds |
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#6
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A friend of mine has a big lizard. And I mean, a friggin BIG lizard. I believe its a monitor lizard. Its over four feet long, not including the tail. He's got a room in his house devoted entirely to this thing - corkboard on the floor and walls, and a 'lizard door' cut into the outside wall so it can get into the backyard.
This creature is as friendly as a dog - it likes to be scratched under its chin, it'll play fetch, it likes to curl up (as much as will fit) in your lap. Its a little scary. ![]() |
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#7
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I had a couple of squirrels as pets once. They are chaos incarnate; even though I liked them, I sure wasn't amused when they chewed my toys. I don't think they would be popular choices as pets.
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#8
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One night it did finally escape, and completely surprised me with the amount of sheer destruction one furry little animal could wreak in a single day. It managed to devour an entire square yard of carpet to build a nest and chewed holes in every conceivable item in an apparently relentless search for food and revenge. I recaptured it, but it was so nasty and hateful that I neglected to clean the terrarium and it eventually drowned in its own urine. |
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#9
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Behind that harmless appearance hamsters have, hides a mean, psychopathic beast; squirrels aren't mean, although they sure are mischievous.
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#10
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Hypothetically speaking. |
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#11
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I've read that octopi are smarter than dogs, almost as smart as young kids...maybe if scuba-diivng catches on much bigger than OTL...
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#12
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Actually, I overstate my case; not all hamsters are mean(in fact, the mean ones might only be a small minority), but those that are are surprisingly unpleasant to deal with, far more than their size would indicate. |
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#13
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Marmosets and Tamarins
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#14
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From a cultural perspective, I would define a true pet as an animal which is fully domesticated and which is bred and raised primarily for companionship (including some work-related uses), not food. I would not include wild animals which are raised in captivity, no matter how cute they are. In general, to me an animal which lives its life in a cage is not a true "pet" - they're more like moving, noisy decor (sorry you bird, fish, and boa lovers out there)
I've always considered the most fascinating alternative pets to be primates: monkeys and apes - both for their intellegence and the possibility they could be trained to do a lot of tasks that only an animal with hands could do. It is interesting to speculate about how society with a range of primate pets and work animals would look. |
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#15
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monkeys and apes are bad bad ideas for pets. They're cute as hell until they get to be adults. Monkeys and chimps can be vicious creature; it isn't often realized just how competitive their societies are in the wild. I remember reading a book about the Simba rebellion in the Congo; it mentioned a rebel leader who kept a male chimpanzee to kill his captives, usually by pulling off parts of their bodies. Apes in particular suffer from a lot of diseases in captivity, way more than cats or dogs. As big as gorillas and orangutans are, they have surprisingly delicate health....
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#16
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Then one day, he said, "no".
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#18
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What about those disgusting-looking little Vietnamese pot-bellied pigs?
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#19
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It's quite common to see insects as pets in Japan. My sister visited there and was surprised at the prices some beetles could command.
Here's an intro link http://www.si.edu/resource/faq/nmnh/buginfo/pets.htm Remember the fad for ant farms and seas monkeys in the 50's and 60's? And how about spiders and the like? Not real cuddly. |
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#20
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A friend of mine tried to keep a tarantula as a pet once. His sister complained to his mother, and his mother complained to him. He answered the spider was less venomous than his sister. Wrong thing to say; the spider had to go.
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