Hi everyone,
I am a social worker at an elementary school and have acquired 3 African Sulcata tortoises from a student. The student and his mother were in a very dangerous domestic violence situation and had to move from my school (Cincinnati/NKY area) to California where mom has family. The student was not able to take his tortoises with him and was very upset about having to leave them. I told him I would take them.
This was a very snap decision, there was no time for research, all I was told is that they are dessert turtles, not tortoises, turtles. The student told me he feeds them worms that are "dried up" and iceberg lettuce. I know that iceberg lettuce is of no nutritional value and mostly all water so I knew that wasn't right.
I began researching them right away and found out that these beautiful animals get to be quite large
do not eat worms, and require huge areas to be happy. The three tortoises I have are not large at all. The largest one looks like the size of an adult box turtle, the other one is slightly smaller than that one and the 3rd one is even smaller.
I feel I can keep these guys pretty happy for awhile but once they get to be large, there is no way I can care for them the way they deserve to be cared for.
Does anyone have any suggestions on what to do long-term with them? They are so sweet. They are enjoying dandelion leaves, weeds, some hay, their basking lamp I've bought, and the cactus I bought for them today at the local Mexican store.
I'll take all the help I can get
I am a social worker at an elementary school and have acquired 3 African Sulcata tortoises from a student. The student and his mother were in a very dangerous domestic violence situation and had to move from my school (Cincinnati/NKY area) to California where mom has family. The student was not able to take his tortoises with him and was very upset about having to leave them. I told him I would take them.
This was a very snap decision, there was no time for research, all I was told is that they are dessert turtles, not tortoises, turtles. The student told me he feeds them worms that are "dried up" and iceberg lettuce. I know that iceberg lettuce is of no nutritional value and mostly all water so I knew that wasn't right.
I began researching them right away and found out that these beautiful animals get to be quite large
I feel I can keep these guys pretty happy for awhile but once they get to be large, there is no way I can care for them the way they deserve to be cared for.
Does anyone have any suggestions on what to do long-term with them? They are so sweet. They are enjoying dandelion leaves, weeds, some hay, their basking lamp I've bought, and the cactus I bought for them today at the local Mexican store.
I'll take all the help I can get