Hello guest! Are you a Bearded Dragon enthusiast? If so we invite you to join our community and see what it has to offer. Our site is specifically designed for you and it's a great place for Beardie enthusiasts to meet online. Once you join you'll be able to post messages, upload pictures of your dragons and enclosures and have a great time with other Bearded Dragon enthusiasts. Sign up today!
Your legless children are precious! And your little bush snake is stunning! I've never seen one in person. So tiny! He makes my smallest snakes look like giants haha
Bush snakes are stunning and so are their colours, like keeping little green mamabs sometimes, they are definitely not easy to keep requiring UVB, a very arborial and humid setup and a very specific diet of geckos which are not always in good supply. Finding captive bred ones is nigh impossible becuase of their difficulty. The one I have there is a juvenile he started at 5cm, They get to around 30cm to 50cm in extreme cases. I usually only take in rescues, get them well enough and eating and healed and send them back on their way.
Here is another rescue called brown (a brown house snake) another indigenous snake. When we got her her face had been crushed and skewered with a garden fork. I assume someone must have also thrown a brick at her. Luckily good ol baythill and tlc and she was doing much better 2 years later, we still keep her now since I don't see any good in releasing her now
Ofcourse there are still loads more and photo days are usually appreciated by everyone
Here's Nom-nom the egg eater a very reclusive fella. These are also tough and finding eggs can be annoying sometimes - another indigenous
http://s1108.photobucket.com/user/FJTILLDEATH/media/Nomnom.jpg.html?o=28[/IMG[
[IMG]http://i1108.photobucket.com/albums/h410/FJTILLDEATH/Butters2.jpg
Trust a king to always leave a lovebite