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lookin at a golden

majesty Jun 07, 2007 03:14 PM

I'm new to tegus but I have been readin on them n monitors for like two months
I have a colombian tree boa n iguana I was buyin some rats when I seen a baby golden tegu I was thinkin of getin him after I find a good vet
1. he's cb does that mean for a more flighty lizard
2. did try n pick him up he was sleep but the tank wasn't a good set up from wat I read
3. is worth bring a tegu back as appossed to pay for a online source
cheers

Replies (4)

A_B Jun 08, 2007 05:02 AM

Don't even bother thinking of getting it. By the way you type you are far too immature to handle a aggressive (defensive) animal such as T. Teguixin. If I were you, I'd look into animals such as Pogona vitteceps.
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0.1.0 Colombian Tegu
0.0.1 Argentine Tegu
1.3.4 Southern Alligator Lizards
1.3.0 Leopard Geckos
1.0.0 Western Hognose
1.0.0 Ball Python
0.0.1 Golden Gecko

majesty Jun 08, 2007 04:28 PM

You can determine the level of my maturity by my typing what kind of internet psychologist are you but anyway I was looking for advice not my personal maturity level

A_B Jun 09, 2007 05:10 AM

Wow, much better typing!!!
But still, don't bother with a teguixin
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0.1 Tupinambis teguixin
0.1 Tupinambis merinae
1.2 Thamnophis sirtalis pickeringii
1.1 Thamnophis sirtalis concinnus
0.1 Lamprophis fuliginosus
1.0 Heterodon nascius
4.0.4 Elgaria multicarinata
1.0 python regius
1.2.5 Eublepharis macularis
0.0.1 Phyllomedusa sauvagii
0.0.1 Rhacodactylus ciliatus
0.1 Sternotherus odoratus

laurarfl Jul 02, 2007 07:57 AM

I didn't particularly seek out a Colombian, but she was in a package of reptiles I was picking up from a rescue. I did some research and prepared myself. When I got her, she was under a year old and I've had her for a year. My 13yo daughter loves her and spends a lot of time working with her. Oreo is a constant project, but is pretty predictable, still she can never be taken for granted. After a year of consistent handling, a lot of scent recognition, and gentle handling, she seems to enjoy coming out of her cage. We homeschool, so my daughter takes Oreo out to snuggle while she reads (Oreo likes to hide under a blanket "cave". Oreo wears a leash and can go outside in short bursts. Even after a year, she stresses easily outside of her cage, huffs and postures at us through her cage, and tail whips. I'm sure she'll always be like this. She's not like an Argentine who's going to follow you around the house and sit on your shoulder.

As for the CB from the pet store, it means Captive Born or Captive Bred and really means....not much in this case. I don't know of any quality large breeders of Colombians. I think the CB probably indicates a farm raised hatchling without much human contact. It could also mean someone imported the clutch of eggs and the lizards hatched in captivity, so they are technically Captive Born. I don't think it will make a difference in the behavior of the lizard. I wouldn't purchase a WC, for that would be a truly flighty teguixin!

Don't be offended by the maturity remark. It may not have come across well, but I think the poster meant well. These are not the easiest lizards to keep and I wouldn't recommend one as a first lizard pet. The low price interests people who cannot afford an Argentine, but they are not they same! The low price is a product of demand...Colombians are not desirable, so the price stays low. The handler of this lizard has to stick to some serious boundaries and read behavior pretty well. Absolutely no hand feeding, no showing it off to friends because it's cool and stressing the lizard, lots of patience and sometimes not as much handling as you might like. My daughter has been bitten a few times, although not terribly. Oreo has quite a set of jaws on her and some sharp little teeth, too! The bottom line is that it's not about the person, but finding a suitable home for the lizard.

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