Indeed. I used to keep redfoots as well back in those days. Bells Hingebacks too. That was, unfortunately, the full spectrum of my experience with forest/forest edge tortoises with more omnivorous tendencies. I never had any problems of that nature, which again, I'm not saying it's impossible, just strange. I mean, I'm sure when it happened, alongside the trauma, it was a big WTH moment. I just find this strange, though, because I've had so many bad things happen where tortoises are involved. I mean, I've had several animals die from dehydration, back in the pre-tortoise forum days when the importance of water and hydration weren't well known among keepers. I've had an animal accidentally drown in his burrow. I've had two tortoises get mauled to death by dogs, and one mauled to the point of requiring intensive care. I had a skunk dig through the corner of an enclosure and kill three baby sulcatas I was babysitting overnight (I only allow babies outdoors for a few hours during the day as a result, though I discovered that was beneficial for other reasons). I stupidly housed two baby Greek tortoises together as a pair, thinking they were siblings so everything would be fine. I failed to recognize the symptoms of bullying, and the submissive animal suffered an infection and died. I lost several Bell's Hingebacks, Russians, and sulcatas that I was fostering, many of them already ill when I acquired them. I mean, I've messed up a lot in my three decades of tortoise keeping. But despite this, I still have my first tortoise, a southern Turkish ibera named Graecus, who is definitely in his sixties or seventies, from what I can figure. I've still got an enviable group of breeding marginateds. I'm not often surprised by how things go wrong, given that they've gone so utterly wrong for me in the past.
I understand the paranoia that comes with suffering the trauma of a loss all too well. I'm just confounded by this situation as a potential vector for disease. Very strange.
T.G.
I understand the paranoia that comes with suffering the trauma of a loss all too well. I'm just confounded by this situation as a potential vector for disease. Very strange.
T.G.