Posted by:
HappyHillbilly
at Sun Jul 8 08:33:03 2007 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by HappyHillbilly ]
First of all, I hope you do realize that I was just picking at you. I assure you that had you been correct I would have poked fun at myself while acknowledging your theory. Guaranteed.
By the way, for the record, PHLdyPayne had absolutely nothing to do with my gecko post, I just jokingly included her name.
> > > "My office is in the basement of my home. When I bring my male down he will hang out with me a little while, then he will bob his head at his reflection in all the glass terrariums stacked here (lol) and then he finds a place and goes to sleep. This is certainly not stress."
Absolutely no offense intended, I think this is like comparing apples to oranges.
There's not any mentioning of head bobbing or reaction to their reflection.
The dragon in question is in a steady, continuous, lethargic state. Is yours?
Is your dragon's glucose level a little high as this one's is?
Please don't take offense to that. I'm not trying to be a smarty britches, I'm just trying to get you to see where I'm coming from, what I'm looking at. And hopefully without offending you or anyone else.
I'm not updated on all the tests available, maybe you are. It seems to me that they've pretty much exhausted testing resources without finding a sign of any physical abnormalities. Are there other tests that might could find something physically causing this dragon's symptoms?
To me, if there aren't any physical signs, that only leaves mental ones. But I may very well be wrong. I've been wrong before and will be wrong again, now, or in the future.
Well, I've gotta get going. Catch ya later, sport!
Take care! HH ----- Due to political correctness run amuck, this ol' hillbilly is now referred to as an: Appalachian American
[ Show Entire Thread ]
|