I had rats as pets in primary school.I had rats as pets when I was in high school. The first was an English Hooded Rat, while the second was a white one.
I had rats as pets in primary school.I had rats as pets when I was in high school. The first was an English Hooded Rat, while the second was a white one.
That's when I kept mice. I preferred my rats. Maybe because they were easier to pet. I would let it out of its cage in an enclosed area, and sit there while it explored the room.I had rats as pets in primary school.
Same, had a white rat. Was very fond of it.I had rats as pets in primary school.
Same, had a white rat. Was very fond of it.
Nasty from our perspective, more like expedient or indifferent for "Nature". Organisms do whatever they need to survive.
Spider wasp with sac spider
sac spider without wasp. Note the lack of legs...
Nature can be nasty
for those really interested, Canon 350d with Sigma 105mm macro lens at F/13, t=1/160s. Canon 320EX flash
No one should but I doWho the fuck lives in the desert?
All mine were British hooded ratsI had rats as pets when I was in high school. The first was an English Hooded Rat, while the second was a white one.
They are a lot more intelligent and love peopleThat's when I kept mice. I preferred my rats. Maybe because they were easier to pet. I would let it out of its cage in an enclosed area, and sit there while it explored the room.
Or maybe easier to domesticate. If you stumble across a rat raiding the chinchilla's almond supply one night, it is likely to run and hide.They are a lot more intelligent and love people
Or maybe easier to domesticate. If you stumble across a rat raiding the chinchilla's almond supply one night, it is likely to run and hide.
Some rats are exceptionally good chefs.But chinchillas make better stew than rats do.
This isn't a photograph of her. I ran an image search for "hooded rat".