• @dustyData
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    251 month ago

    My nephew has snails. He smuggled them out of the schoolyard in his hoodie after the teachers caught him the first time and confiscated them. My sister found them and had to take them to a pet store to make sure they weren’t dangerous. Now they sit in a nice terrarium and it turns out the hardest part is keeping the humidity up.

  • @[email protected]
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    211 month ago

    Met a couple with a pet raccoon, on a leash and everything. I asked them how it was, since my wife had fantasized about a pet raccoon. They described it as a “little mischief goblin”.

    • Majorllama
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      71 month ago

      We had one get into our trash once. I guess we had thrown out some yogurt that was starting to go bad and this little fucker got yogurty little foot prints all over our front porch. It almost looked intentional how many there were and how spread out it got them. Thankfully we just let our dogs out and they pretty much licked the porch clean lol.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 month ago

      Yuuup. Cute little destructive whirlwinds that can open things. I’ve known a few, “little mischief goblin” is apt.

    • @garbagebagel
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      11 month ago

      Omg my dream. We used to have some visit us at my old work and we would feed them grapes and give them a lil bowl to wash their grapes in. They were the cutest.

  • Boomer Humor Doomergod
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    1 month ago

    I worked with someone who lived in South Africa who nursed a couple wild finches back to health. The finches got better but never flew away, and lived in the house. They’d sit on her shoulders during zoom meetings.

  • @[email protected]
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    131 month ago

    I’ve seen someone walking a pig in the forest. Yes, a large pink hairless pig. It was almost like walking a dog, but this animal was quite a bit larger than most dogs.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 month ago

        That would make sense.

        Once I saw a documentary about truffle hunting, and dogs were much better in this regard. Pigs tend to eat everything they find, whereas dogs will obediently restrain themselves and only point to the truffle instead of eating it.

    • Tiefling IRL
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      81 month ago

      One of my neighbors has a pig that’s so beloved by the local community he has shirts. I have one. They have an African grey parrot too.

  • @garbagebagel
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    101 month ago

    This isn’t that exotic I guess but I had a customer at the restaurant that would smuggle in his pet rat (I worked the graveyard so usually nobody was around). Its name was Gizmo and it would sit on his shoulder under his sweater and he would feed it French toast. Sweetest little thing.

  • @ieatpwns
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    101 month ago

    I knew someone who dealt in exotic animals and they came to work with a baby caiman alligator in a Tupperware because they were selling it after work

    • burgersc12
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      25 days ago
      1. caiman
      2. alligator

      These are two different species. While caiman are part of the Alligatoridae family, they are not alligators apparently.

      Caimans are distinguished from alligators…

      Source:Wikipedia

      • @ieatpwns
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        31 month ago

        Let me go back in Time and double check

      • @[email protected]
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        026 days ago

        Alligator is the common name for the family and also the common name of a few specific species. It’s kind of like how all tortoises are turtles, but not all turtles are tortoises. All caiman are alligators, but not all alligators are caimans.

        • burgersc12
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          25 days ago

          From Wikipedia

          Caiman is an alligatorid belonging to the subfamily Caimaninae, one of two primary lineages within the Alligatoridae family, the other being alligators

          Alligatorinae is a subfamily within the family Alligatoridae that contains the alligators and their closest extinct relatives, and is the sister taxon to Caimaninae

          Alligators and caimans split about 53-65 million years ago

          Alligatoridae contains eight living species: two alligators within Alligatorinae, and the six caimans of Caimaninae

          The true alligators are today represented by two species

          …the subfamily Caimaninae, which differ from the alligator…

          Technically they are Alligatoridae, but when people refer to “Alligators” they mean the Genus: Alligatorinae. This would be like saying that the Caimans and Alligators are both Crocodiles because they come from the Order: Crocodilia.

          • @[email protected]
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            026 days ago

            I understand that common names getting mixed use in families, genus, and species can be confusing, but you’re being willfully obtuse here just to double down on useless pedantry.

            • burgersc12
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              126 days ago

              Not my fault it says “Alligator and Caiman” not Alligators including Caiman. I’m just a guy reading Wikipedia.

              • @[email protected]
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                025 days ago

                Reading is about more than reciting facts and quoting sources. Sure, you can read, but you have utterly failed to comprehend the context or the article or the actual substance of my comments.

  • @[email protected]
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    81 month ago

    saw someone with a big ass snake.

    Also, I owned a hedgehog once, dude had some serious trauma from his 5 previous owners. Yeah, 5.
    He was always angry, but I still played with him anyways trying to get him to warm up to people. Never did, but he did like exploring all the books and crannies of the room. Wish I could’ve had him before all his previous owners :(

    • @BradleyUffner
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      21 month ago

      ass snake

      Oh man, those are the worst!

    • Call me Lenny/LeniOPM
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      21 month ago

      They need to regulate ownership better if he went through five bad owners, like was the person managing those transactions Dr. Eggman?

  • Majorllama
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    81 month ago

    I live in California. Pretty much all the cool pets are illegal here.

    That being said I knew a guy who had a raccoon and several ferrets. Their house smelled awful but once you were there for awhile you kinda stopped smelling it and the raccoon and ferrets were adorable together.

    • @[email protected]
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      91 month ago

      I had a ferret in my 20s. Little dude bathed at least once a week and still smelled. Was (almost) litter trained and could bend in half, spastically hopping around like a little smelly crackhead

      • Majorllama
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        31 month ago

        Yeah they stink no matter what. You can get their stinky gland removed but I’m still not sure if that’s good for them or not. Idk. I’m not a veterinarian and they are super illegal here so it’s not really something I am concerned about at this present moment haha.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 month ago

          Heard about the gland thing, and definitely not into it, but he had just an overall musky smell. Not like he sprayed or anything. We went to beach a lot and he’d hang out under umbrella shade and flirt with the girls.

          • Majorllama
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            41 month ago

            Yeah the smell is strong and odd but it’s not outright bad. Just a bit weird until you get used it.

  • GingaNinga
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    81 month ago

    I’m friends with one guy who’s got an axolotl and another who’s got one of those African grey parrots. Both really cool animals. Also knew a kid back in school that had a pet squirrel.

  • @QuarterSwede
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    71 month ago

    Half dog, half wolf hybrid. That thing made a Great Dane look small. I mean, his head was slightly lower than mine at 5’8”. I could’ve easily ridden him. Beautiful animal. Wish I had a picture.

  • @[email protected]
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    71 month ago

    When I was a kid, 7-8 years old kinda thing, there was an older guy (maybe 13) who had a pet hawk.
    He’d walk around the neighbourhood with the hawk perched on his leather-bound wrist, chained somehow.
    That’s all I recall; don’t know who, what, or how. Saw it 3 or 4 times over the course of a year or two…

  • @Sequentialsilence
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    71 month ago

    My aunt worked as a zoo vet, and was one of the people animal control would call if they found an exotic animal and didn’t know what to do with it. As a result I grew up being able to casually play with several different species of monkeys, as well as an asshole African grey parrot. When I was in high school she even fostered a serval cat for a short time till they could find a more permanent facility.

    • Call me Lenny/LeniOPM
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      111 month ago

      Rule of thumb in my opinion, if you have to perform body modification on an animal, it doesn’t sound like it was ever worth keeping. Clipping bird wings, deforming monkey thumbs, declawing cats, etc. make me cringe bad.

      • @FelixCress
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        41 month ago

        Why the fuck would anyone declaw a cat??? Or the thing with a monkey?

        But I don’t entirely agree with you - with some pets you need to cut their balls.

        • Call me Lenny/LeniOPM
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          31 month ago

          People sadly do all those things. People declaw cats because cat claws can get sharp enough to get into fabric, and the people who declaw their cats either don’t realize cat claws are a part of their fingers or don’t care. People dethumb monkeys because it hinders their ability to weaponize their surroundings, again because all they seem to care about is showing off their pet.

          Personally, I would caution against pet castration/neutering/spaying even though it’s not up there with the other things. When it comes to this, you’re just trading some problems for other problems, and it still says a bit about the act of owning them.

          • @FelixCress
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            41 month ago

            I would caution against pet castration/neutering/spaying even though it’s not up there with the other things. When it comes to this, you’re just trading some problems for other problems, and it still says a bit about the act of owning them.

            Castration is pretty much a necessity for some pets. Unless you want your house to stink like a crossover between a zoo and a public toilet.

            • Call me Lenny/LeniOPM
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              11 month ago

              I mean when it’s unnecessary. In many pets it is necessary, but many people do it just because it’s the norm.

              When it comes to odor though? I’d cope.

    • @Oberyn
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      41 month ago

      Wtf … wy would you defang tarantulas ⁉️⁉️⁉️

        • @[email protected]
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          1 month ago

          I’m sorry, this makes no sense.

          Spiders bite, inject venom and feed through their fangs (Chelicerae). If you remove them the spider won’t be able to bite and more importantly, eat, anymore. So you can’t keep a defanged spider for very long …

    • @[email protected]
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      11 month ago

      I’m sorry, but the asshole here is your friend. First of all, “defanging” a spider will just kill the spider, slowly (see comment below).

      And while they certainly aren’t for everybody, they actually are excellent pets if you know what you’re doing. Hell, I’ve kept a dozen Pterinochilus murinus, which are indeed assholes, still never got bitten.

      People shouldn’t keep pets if they don’t know how to care for them.

  • Count Regal Inkwell
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    51 month ago

    My bestie has an iguana. Not that exotic in the grand scheme of things, even if pretty cool.

    So I’m also internet acquainted with a guy that cares for tiger cubs. Except the big kitties aren’t his, he just works at a zoo.