Hello. I'm contemplating a move to the California bay area and need info. What should I know about pet laws in California? What should I know about the bay area in general? Thanks for any help.
Hello. I'm contemplating a move to the California bay area and need info. What should I know about pet laws in California? What should I know about the bay area in general? Thanks for any help.
Too many pets? What's that?
All I know is that Quakers are illegal there.. and last time I heard, Ferrets were still illegal there, also. Two reasons why I'll never move to CA! =D
Maybe some fellow PTers from CA can be of more help than I am. =]
A one bedroom apartment will cost you $900 a month or more.
Ferrets, Gerbils, marsupials, Quakers, a lot of pets are illegal here. What pets do you own?
It would be lovely to have another PTer nearby!
Thank you Wolf_Q!
The bay is a fabulous place to live, but it costs lots of $$$. Like Cathy mentioned, renting a simple one-bedroom apartment over here can empty your wallet in no time. That said, it's incredibly diverse and I love it. Simply said, if you're looking for something, chances are we'll have it. What's great about the bay is that it's centered heavily around the major cities; yet, in places like Martinez and parts of Livermore, you can buy a large house with acreage or even a farm (although it'll cost you).
But yes, many pets are illegal over here. The only one that I know of for *certain* is the Quaker. If you're a dog/cat type of person, though, you'd be hard pressed to find a better place to live than the bay. Of course, I'm not biased![]()
Giselle - Whereish are you located? Want to meet up at a dog park or something sometime?![]()
Thank you Wolf_Q!
here are the pets I can think of, and find that are illegal to own in California.
Gars
African clawed frog
Alligators
Caimans
Snapping turtles
White-eyes (Zosterops)
Monk (Quaker) parakeet
Short-tailed opossum
Sugar glider
Hedgehogs
Degu
All gerbils and jirds (like the Duprasi)
Dormouse (any)
Cacomistle
Coatimundi
Skunks
Arctic fox (blue fox)
Fennec fox
Wolf-dog hybrids*
Ferret
African lion
Serval
Flying squirrels
All chipmunks and squirrels
Prairie dogs
Gambian giant pouched rat
African striped grass mouse (zebra mouse)
African pygmy mouse
Egyptian spiny mouse
Raccoon
Ringtail
Monkeys, includes chimpanzees
Not to forget our little foster dog Velma Dinkley!
You should also check the local ordinances for the city you move to.
As an example: my city has a 3 dog limit, per house. No limit on cats. BUT the city next door to me limits cats to 3 per house, and dogs to 2 per house.
Just an FYI.
.
I don't understand the gerbils, a lot are born in captivity and they've been kept as pets for a long time. I understand the wild animal bans and bans on threatened or dangerous species. I wonder if they have any regulations on aquarium fish. Just about anybody can go out and buy an endangered species of aquarium fish. Some species are almost completely wiped out in the wild. Anyway, my point, who's going to find out if you have a gerbil? Unless you have a friend you get in a fight with and they tell on you.
"There are two things which cannot be attacked in front: ignorance and narrow-mindedness. They can only be shaken by the simple development of the contrary qualities. They will not bear discussion."
Lord John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton
The reason why they banned gerbiles and all desert animals is because, as they are herbivores, if they got loose they could breed and damage crops.
ò¿ò
A domestic female gerbil gets out in one part of the expansive CA, a domestic male in another. They somehow manage to escape predators, poison, disease, and numerous other hazards. (All of this within their short lifespans and also they find each other to mate, since different species of rodents cannot produce live offspring) The babies all survive and find prospective mates through some odd scenario. Eventually they take over the whole state of California. Kinda like how every mouse from every litter survives and we have hundreds of millions ruining our crops, but only this time its pet rodents that manage to escape the house and survive to tell about it.
How likely is that scenario? And with the pesticides already used for mice and rats? Who honestly thought up that one? Gerbils eat seeds and dry vegetation anyway, a domestic gerbil wouldn't live long pilching crops.
"There are two things which cannot be attacked in front: ignorance and narrow-mindedness. They can only be shaken by the simple development of the contrary qualities. They will not bear discussion."
Lord John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton
Yes, she's definitely half wolf half GSD. They got her from a breeder, albeit not one in California.
Laws are laws and most are implemented for good reasons. I can understand why the quaker is banned here, and I'm fine with it. Now that I realize the destruction that invasive and foreign flora/fauna have concocted on native California soil, these bans make fair sense to me. To each their own![]()
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