Lizard wrap

Fred Agnir said:
LOL!!! No, Mike. What does the lizard itself look like???

Fred <~~~ nice stuff, however.

Maybe I'm wrong but...
Question for Michael webb "Cuemaker": What does the lizard wrap look like???


Question for Jack hanna "Animal lover": What does the lizard itself look like???


http://www.animaladventures.com/
:p
 
Getnbzy said:
Maybe I'm wrong but...
Question for Michael webb "Cuemaker": What does the lizard wrap look like???


Question for Jack hanna "Animal lover": What does the lizard itself look like???


http://www.animaladventures.com/
:p

Good question JR, I put samples of the lizard on cues, I really don't know what it looks like alive or what kind it is,
 
Fred Agnir said:
And while we're at it, what is a ringtail lizard? I can't ever wade through the Google Search of boots, wallets and wraps to ever find a photo of a whole one on the internet.

Fred

Yeah, that's because the only people that call them "Ringtail Lizards" are the skin dealers (and thus, cuemakers). To everyone else, they are Water Monitors.
 
GeraldG said:
Yeah, that's because the only people that call them "Ringtail Lizards" are the skin dealers (and thus, cuemakers). To everyone else, they are Water Monitors.
Cute little fellers, ain't they?

That's what my grandad used to say about the calves we raised, too!! :p
 
Michael Webb said:


Yeah, those things are a problem in Florida. They have no natural enemies there...nothing preys on them. Alligators may eat a few babies, raccoons may tear up a few nests and eat the eggs, but other than that they pretty much have carte blanche. They are top-level predators and will pretty much end up decimating the native wildlife that is of a size they can overpower and eat.

Another big problem in Florida is Burmese Pythons (Python molurus bivitattus). It's another animal that people bought as a baby for a pet, then it got entirely too big to handle, so they released it (an illegal act). Considering the life span of these things, all it takes is for a few people to do that over a 20 year period in the same general area and you end up with another invasive species. A full-grown Burmese Python (20 ft long and 300 lbs or larger) is fully capable of killing an adult human, and will most assuredly prey on pet animals and smaller livestock.
 
GeraldG said:
Yeah, that's because the only people that call them "Ringtail Lizards" are the skin dealers (and thus, cuemakers). To everyone else, they are Water Monitors.

Great stuff. Thanks Gerald. I assume then that "ringtail" is the tail.

Fred
 
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