Strange Things!

February FOTM Photo Contest Starts Now!
FishForums.net Fish of the Month
🏆 Click to enter! 🏆

vampire-queen

New Member
Joined
Mar 14, 2010
Messages
40
Reaction score
0
Right as the title and description say me and Alessa saw a muscle in a cold fresh water lake like pound and it was dead cause i opened it and it didn't close up on me but we don't know if it was a fresh water muscle or just a muscle that someone put in there. :huh:

:devil: Vampire-Queen
 
It was a muscle cause i have seen muscle shells and it was the same as them but it was all together and it was orangey colour inside :huh:

:devil: Vampire-Queen
 
by any chance are you and alessa sisters?? it seems that way lol
 
Were not biologically linked but we count ourselves as sisters. It was definitely dead because when she opened it, it stunk! I gagged and nearly threw up! It was the normal marine muscle that you get. Same shell, shape, size and everything. It was mainly orange but it had some grey where it was decaying!

Alessa x.
 
Oh btw i have a mouse that i found in school it was nearly stood on and it keeps on walking around in circles i think half it brain isn't working right on it has a very bad head injury please don't have a go at me it was leave it or let it die!

:devil: Vampire-Queen
 
Oh btw i have a mouse that i found in school it was nearly stood on and it keeps on walking around in circles i think half it brain isn't working right on it has a very bad head injury please don't have a go at me it was leave it or let it die!

:devil: Vampire-Queen
I still really dont get why you 2 always pick things up. Just leave them it may not be the nicest thing but if it does die thats just how things work.
 
If it survives and is back to full health then please release into the field near you! Please Vampire it will need to go back into the wild!

Alessa x.
 
I know that but if it keeps walking around in circles then i can't release it and i picked it up because it was take it home or let it get stood on because someone nearly did stand on it and it is too small to die but if it gets back to health then i will release it in the woods next to my house.

:devil: Vampire-Queen
 
I thik you should just let it go now and let it fend for itself. If it lives fine if it dies it will be food for another animal that just how it works.
 
I agree with kizno vamp! It needs to fend for itself! You can't just keep picking wild animals up like this! If you were picking it up then putting it straight in a field then that would have been fine but you really need to leave it be next you see an animal that looks injured. I have vowed to my mum that i won't pick anymore animals up when i find them!

Alessa x.
 
I know that but it was helpless in school and my science teacher said the best thing to do is take it home and see if it recovers and that is what im doing.

:devil: Vampire-Queen
 
I know how you feel vampire queen. Few months ago I found a common mynah chick on the grass in my garden I carried the chick and searched for it's nest and it turned out to be in a hole high in the tree.... So I decided to rear it and raise it until it can fend for it self, but if I kept the chick the way it was on the grass it will be eaten by a crow or ants or maybe a feral cat. Raising the chick was hard and difficult and I had to go to pet shop to buy insects like meal worms or small crickets, but it's all worth it!! Now it's fully matured and it lives happily among my other pets and my family members and it also leaves my home in the morning and comes back after few hours!! And he sleeps in a nest box that I bought from the pet store for him. I called him swipe (he comes home with weird things like bottle lids and rings and with some insects in his beak hence his name).
 
If you release a mouse in a rural area a high chance a cat will catch it and play with its life. If you release it in a field it will probably die anyway. When they've got themselves in that situation they've got little chance of survival. The problem with the wild rodents are they get absolutely petrified and beat their little hearts out same with wild rabbits.

I "Rescued" a wild rabbit some time ago as come construction workers had unearthed its burrow and it was petrified in the corner of the gardener next to a cement mixer. I put it in a big cardboard box in the dark and just filled it with hay and left some leaves in there. It was petrified everytime I checked on it it was panting and shaking I tried to let it out the box in my garden but it didn't want to know. Anyway I had asked someone who works for "Wirral Country Park" to go and release it and they said it was an iffy topic but he would do it personally so it was set! Though during the night it died!

Moral of the story is usually wild animals won't survive captivity for long if at all! No matter how hard you try.
 

Most reactions

Back
Top