Mar 26, 2008, 22:38
I have had dozens of lizards and snakes as pets, from all over the world.
Local pet shops knew of my successes and would call me to claim returns, captures and sick or injured animals--I was like the free vet and animal shelter for reptiles.
At one time my one-bedroom apartment had 16 lizards, a snake and 2 fish tanks.
I even built an incubator and hatched some eggs that an injured lizard left me, selling four and keeping one to old age.
All this was in the 1990s--my very last lizard died 4 years ago.
Last night I was loading my car for the highway shoot and almost stepped on this:
It is an Albino Corn Snake, a very popular pet species that is in the Rat Snake family.
Since they don't live in this part of Texas (and albinos are very rare in the wild) it must have been someone's pet.
They either let it go after tiring of it (a bad idea for many reasons!) or it escaped.
Either way, they were bad owners so we're keeping it.
When I told Sylvia that I caught a snake and wanted to keep it she was a little disturbed at having a snake in the house.
Expecting it to be like the others we see around, brown or black and very drab, she was even more disturbed by how pretty it is because she knew another valid argument against it's value as a pet was lost.
Once I told her how much money it's worth, yet another wall was knocked down.
Then I told her she gets to name it.
Smart, right?
Once I determine the gender she'll be naming "Our Snake" as she now puts it.
She even asked my to copy this photo to her phone so she can show people "our snake".
I spent today gathering supplies to make it's new home perfect (I already had most of what we needed) and look forward to buying the first mouse dinner after our snake gets settled-in.
Should be some fun photo-ops in the future. They are constrictors that strike fast and quickly wrap the rodent with body coils to crush their prey before swallowing whole.
It's almost 3 feet long and healthy, and is very calm--tolerates handling without any alarm or biting--a wonderful (and silent) pet that now lives within arm's reach to my left as I type this.
Local pet shops knew of my successes and would call me to claim returns, captures and sick or injured animals--I was like the free vet and animal shelter for reptiles.
At one time my one-bedroom apartment had 16 lizards, a snake and 2 fish tanks.
I even built an incubator and hatched some eggs that an injured lizard left me, selling four and keeping one to old age.
All this was in the 1990s--my very last lizard died 4 years ago.
Last night I was loading my car for the highway shoot and almost stepped on this:
![[Image: kak.albinocornsnake.jpg]](http://www.shuttertalk.com/forums/images/upload/kak.albinocornsnake.jpg)
It is an Albino Corn Snake, a very popular pet species that is in the Rat Snake family.
Since they don't live in this part of Texas (and albinos are very rare in the wild) it must have been someone's pet.
They either let it go after tiring of it (a bad idea for many reasons!) or it escaped.
Either way, they were bad owners so we're keeping it.
When I told Sylvia that I caught a snake and wanted to keep it she was a little disturbed at having a snake in the house.
Expecting it to be like the others we see around, brown or black and very drab, she was even more disturbed by how pretty it is because she knew another valid argument against it's value as a pet was lost.
Once I told her how much money it's worth, yet another wall was knocked down.
Then I told her she gets to name it.
Smart, right?
Once I determine the gender she'll be naming "Our Snake" as she now puts it.
She even asked my to copy this photo to her phone so she can show people "our snake".
I spent today gathering supplies to make it's new home perfect (I already had most of what we needed) and look forward to buying the first mouse dinner after our snake gets settled-in.
Should be some fun photo-ops in the future. They are constrictors that strike fast and quickly wrap the rodent with body coils to crush their prey before swallowing whole.
It's almost 3 feet long and healthy, and is very calm--tolerates handling without any alarm or biting--a wonderful (and silent) pet that now lives within arm's reach to my left as I type this.