Jan. 7th, 2006 06:38 pm
Page Summary
siani-hedgehog.livejournal.com - (no subject)
razorjak.livejournal.com - (no subject)
perrrfect-angel.livejournal.com - (no subject)
the--owner.livejournal.com - (no subject)
razorjak.livejournal.com - (no subject)
ev0lemi.livejournal.com - (no subject)
imperfectme.livejournal.com - (no subject)
razorjak.livejournal.com - (no subject)
imperfectme.livejournal.com - (no subject)
siani-hedgehog.livejournal.com - (no subject)
razorjak.livejournal.com - (no subject)
razorjak.livejournal.com - (no subject)
imperfectme.livejournal.com - (no subject)
razorjak.livejournal.com - (no subject)
geekalpha.livejournal.com - (no subject)
Style Credit
- Base style: Tectonic by and
- Theme: City Dragon by
Expand Cut Tags
No cut tags
no subject
we used to have a guy who had one that lived inside his leather jacket who used to come into the pet shop with it. :)
no subject
no subject
A pet flying squirrel sounds like an interesting pet.
no subject
no subject
They are almost identical in flight. Only noticable difference are the facial markings. The size difference isn't enough to be able to gauge in flight.
no subject
no subject
no subject
And unlike sugargliders which have a high mortality rate in captivity, flying squirrels can go up to three times their "natural" lifespan in captivity as opposed to what they do in the wild.
Seems flyers are predisposed to rickets. They don't get the calcium in their diet to overcome their natural deficiencies. In the wild they tend to die around fives years old. Kept as pets and given a calcium suppliment they've been known to live well over ten years.
Word of warning though, flying squirrels tend to bond to ONE owner.
(- A neighbor had one as a pet when I was growing up. I did a bit of research on them over the years. I'd love a japanese dwarf flying squirrel. Those things are adorable. -)
no subject
And yeah, flyers are just like gliders in the whole bonding to one owner thing. I hear that the flyers are even a bit more sociable than gliders, so that's a bonus.
no subject
no subject
From everything I've read, it's something that is common with them in the wild. Something about their diet not having enough calcium or vitamin d to compensate for their nocturnal cycle.
no subject
Heh, flying squirrels are a LOT more sociable than sugargliders. And they chatter, not hiss.
no subject
no subject
I did not know that gliders were prone to that too. But yeah, pretty much what they require.
And since they tend to be a bit heavier than gliders, better to anchor your lamps as those are what they tend to like landing on.
no subject