Anonymous wrote:You gotta sing “It’s the circle of life!” When it happens.
Anonymous wrote:Oh my. That would upset me too. Reminds me of the time we got a pet store hamster. She had babies and then bit all their heads off. Or the time we had a nest or bird eggs in our bush. They hatched and we were watching them, and then a downpour of rain destroyed the nest and the babies were gone. Life is hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You would be psychopathic if you weren't upset, OP.
Yes, you need to separate the fish babies. For rodents, if you leave them in a quiet part of the house, in a large cage and don't stress them, the risk they kill their babies decreases significantly (separate the male).
People, you've got to do a little research when you get pets. Fish and little critters are entirely deserving of just as much love and care as horses, cats and dogs.
I don’t think OP needed a lecture. When I was growing up we bought a male hamster from a pet store. Let’s just say the babies were quite a surprise, so no we didn’t research hamster babies.
Anonymous wrote:
You would be psychopathic if you weren't upset, OP.
Yes, you need to separate the fish babies. For rodents, if you leave them in a quiet part of the house, in a large cage and don't stress them, the risk they kill their babies decreases significantly (separate the male).
People, you've got to do a little research when you get pets. Fish and little critters are entirely deserving of just as much love and care as horses, cats and dogs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow this post is the epitome of “that escalated quickly.” I thought it was going to be a cute story about baby fishies.
I knew where that was going….you need a net to separate the babies in the water. Pet fish 101.
Anonymous wrote:Wow this post is the epitome of “that escalated quickly.” I thought it was going to be a cute story about baby fishies.