Ebony Skies ; wrote:@Fuzzy, it's great he made such an amazing recovery!






FuzzyThePunkCat wrote:Ebony Skies ; wrote:@Fuzzy, it's great he made such an amazing recovery!
I know!
I am now officially part of a 3 person independent rat rescue team! I was invited to joinSo we will soon be doing many rescues between us.





AngelusGaston wrote:FuzzyThePunkCat wrote:Ebony Skies ; wrote:@Fuzzy, it's great he made such an amazing recovery!
I know!
I am now officially part of a 3 person independent rat rescue team! I was invited to joinSo we will soon be doing many rescues between us.
I would wait till you have a stable job and can help cover the costs before jumping in to rescue. The friend I have has spent who knows how much on vet bills, converting two rooms in to rat rooms ( one for males and one for females ) and don't forget the food bill because as soon as people know you rescue rats you can end up over whelmed.
Hex has at least 50 rats not counting his show rats and it takes a lot of time, money and space to keep them happy and health.











Joe Kerr wrote:If your dad pays for them, then
your dad rescues rats, not you.
If you aren't the provider for
your animals, they aren't your
animals. If your parents pay
for their food, vet bills, etc,
then they are your parents'
animals, not yours.











AngelusGaston wrote:
It isn't that simple though every rat needs quarantine, those who need meds need separate care, vets arnt cheap for rats and if you get 8 or 9 suddenly dumped on you what then.
Your don't seem to be taking in the magnitude of what your about to do.

Pets tend to end up with the primary care giver
if it is taken to court. Primary care is NOT who feeds,
plays with, and buys things for the animal. It includes
the following:
Who paid for the pet?
Who paid for any vet bills?
Who paid for food?
Who paid for for any licenses needed?
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