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Thread: This is one pet that SHOULD have been neutered...

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    Alberta, Canada
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    22,005
    A 10 month old camel is a lot heavier, I would think!
    "Do or do not. There is no try." -- Yoda

  2. #2
    Quote Originally Posted by Catty1
    A 10 month old camel is a lot heavier, I would think!
    I believe they are.. I have no idea what 150kg means, but I think thats a LOT more then a colt..

    I'm talking about a 4' colt, which prob weighs about 100lb if not less... They are still dangerious, but when trained young they, like a dog can be trained that mounting people it BAD...

    I was mostly trying to say that the animal should have been trained before she tried to play with it.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    Alberta, Canada
    Posts
    22,005
    150 kg = 330 lbs!

    Yes, what the one guy in the article said is right in line with what you said, Jess - that this sort of situation is seen when the pet has affection but NO discipline or training.

    Poor lady...
    "Do or do not. There is no try." -- Yoda

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Catty1
    150 kg = 330 lbs!

    Yes, what the one guy in the article said is right in line with what you said, Jess - that this sort of situation is seen when the pet has affection but NO discipline or training.

    Poor lady...
    & poor animal, I'm sure the family is going to want it destroyed, as non of them will ever love it.. Poor thing ment no harm

  5. #5
    I was on a camel group for awhile plus worked with llamas which are in the same family and similar but camels though domesticated a long time remain a little wilder.

    1st problem never(unless it means life or death for the baby) bottle feed a camelid. They imprint on what raises them. One male where I worked the mistake was made of letting it nurse off a goat that allowed. Was cute and funny, till he grew up. Always trying to mount the goats and fight with the male goats. He had to be sent to a goatless home. Many of the neutered males still mount but they mount other of their species unless imprinted.

    2nd is you don't want an intact male camel unless you have experience with the species already. They are among many species that go seasonally crazy with hormones.

    Camels are fairly common in AU(here a camel is more expensive than a llama because llamas are more common) and they probably didn't think to much of it. Like someone getting a cow as a 'pet' They think of sweet Bettys farm cow but it's not reality or that simple they are big and can be dangerous too.

    And donkeys can be nuts too. Working with mini donkeys at one show we only had two out at a time so the rest get restless and want out. I did a noon check of waters and clean ect. and was about to go out the gate but they were shoving around wanting out. I shoed them back then started to open the gate and they rushed up and the really crazy one jumped on me. Front legs over my shoulders. I think a combo of the others crowded around me and holding the gate kept me up or it could have been very bad.

    Once she was off of me I just climbed the fence instead and did so from then on till we moved on.

    All big animals can be dangerous.

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