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Furless pets

By John Goodall

Sunday, July 14, 2002


By STEPHEN SIFF
VINDICATOR STAFF WRITER
THEY ARE CREEPY AND they are crawly and they lunch on live crickets.
So why would anyone want to keep a reptile as a pet?
"They are cute," said Breeanna Markowitz, 9, of Warren, whose fat-tailed gecko, Lizzie, placed first this past week at the Trumbull County Junior Fair.
"She wanted a horse," said Breeanna's father, Doug. "We kind of had to do what we can do in the city."
Breeanna has been involved in Brookfield 4-H Friends for about a year and has made do with guinea pigs, bunny rabbits, Lizzie and the family dog.
On a premonition
The family used to have a ball python as well, but dad gave it away based on a friend's premonition.
"My dad's friend kept having dreams he was going to eat our little puppies," Breeanna said.
Reptile lovers, it seems, rarely settle for just a single pet. Take Jessica Boley, age 15. She has two box turtles, a bearded dragon, two green anoles, a sulcata tortoise, and, most recently, a dairy feeder cow.
"Every year I entered a small animal in the fair and I always won first place," said Jessica, of Brookfield. "I thought the cow would be more competition for me."
Oh yes, she also has a handful of guinea pigs and rabbits.
"At least we know where she is," said Jessica's mother, Jill, one of the Brookfield 4-H Friends advisers.
"She is out cleaning a cage."
Her latest acquisition is Ralph, a turtle whose species lives 70 to 100 years and can grow to 240 to 400 pounds.
"Hopefully, by that time, I will move out and get my own home," Jessica said.
Ralph now makes do in a tastefully decorated aquarium tank. "I told Jessica that when she gets married, her turtle is going down the aisle after her," her mother said.
Todd Margo, 13, of Niles, is a toad guy. He keeps pairs of American toads and fire-bellied toads, and even goes by the nickname Toad, on occasion.
"I like to watch them because they are comical sometimes," he said. "They'll ride a box turtle and sit on its shell."
No difference
Reptiles do not offer the same kinds of enjoyment that dogs and cats do, said Danny Kerr, who has judged the 4-H reptile competition for the last three years.
They are never going to run over when you call their name, he said. But there is a lot to learn from a lizard, he said.
Study them, and you can learn their techniques of communication through bobbing heads and waving arms.
"They are misunderstood," he said. "They really do make good pets."