Posted by:
reptilicus81
at Wed Jan 21 19:55:01 2004 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by reptilicus81 ]
Freezing once living cells causes them to degrade. When you thaw out the rodent it is "mushy" because the cells are no longer firm. Heating a frozen rodent also adds to this! ----- *Amy*
0.1 Green Iguana (yes, I have a lizard in my bathroom)-iggy
2.1 Ball Pythons (normal)-cosi, jake, and frosty mcfry
0.1 B.smithi (mexican redknee tarantula)-athena
0.0.1 midland painted turtle-nemo
1.1 dogs-rocky and skippy
1.0 normal grey cockatiel-opie
0.0.30 betta, guppies, rosy reds, fantail goldfish, clown pleco,...
[ Hide Replies ]
- CAN SOMEONE TELL ME - pimp_n_python, Wed Jan 21 19:50:56 2004
RE: CAN SOMEONE TELL ME - reptilicus81, Wed Jan 21 19:55:01 2004
- Yes, I can - maizeysdad, Wed Jan 21 20:19:51 2004
- I can't wait to hear today's science minute!! n/p - wideglide, Thu Jan 22 08:34:19 2004
- RE: Yes, I can - grimdog, Thu Jan 22 11:53:23 2004
- I've also noticed if you thaw out a rodent and leave it sit too long - wideglide, Thu Jan 22 12:14:32 2004
- Cells - maizeysdad, Thu Jan 22 12:57:35 2004
- RE: Cells - grimdog, Thu Jan 22 13:06:59 2004
- Paper - maizeysdad, Thu Jan 22 13:14:30 2004
- RE: Paper - grimdog, Thu Jan 22 13:27:32 2004
- RE: Paper - grimdog, Thu Jan 22 13:37:29 2004
- RE: Paper - grimdog, Thu Jan 22 13:43:12 2004
- RE: Paper - wideglide, Thu Jan 22 15:00:16 2004
- RE: Paper - grimdog, Thu Jan 22 15:11:02 2004
- I don't buy either argument. - rodmalm, Thu Jan 22 14:47:48 2004
- Don't have time to read the whole thread BUT... - serpentcity, Fri Jan 23 21:50:08 2004
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