Retic Almost Legendary Joined Jan 3, 2004 Messages 8,284 Reaction score 0 Location Sydney Sep 13, 2012 #1 I have always been a huge fan of the land tortoises and picked up this pair of South American Red Foot Tortoises at a reptile show recently. Attachments 20120729_143212-1.jpg 121.5 KB · Views: 113
I have always been a huge fan of the land tortoises and picked up this pair of South American Red Foot Tortoises at a reptile show recently.
Jeannine Very Well-Known Member Joined Apr 8, 2010 Messages 1,030 Reaction score 0 Location Broken Hill Sep 13, 2012 #2 how cute they look like they are dancing
Pinoy Very Well-Known Member Joined Mar 18, 2011 Messages 1,050 Reaction score 0 Location NSW Sep 13, 2012 #3 Nice! Wish we could keep tortoises in Australia
K3nny Well-Known Member Joined Apr 18, 2011 Messages 524 Reaction score 0 Location Sydney Sep 13, 2012 #4 quick question, are cherry faced red foots an actual strain/sub-species or are they just another marketing ploy?
quick question, are cherry faced red foots an actual strain/sub-species or are they just another marketing ploy?
Umbral Very Well-Known Member Joined Feb 2, 2011 Messages 1,345 Reaction score 0 Location Aberdare NSW Sep 13, 2012 #5 Nice addition! I've always loved tortoises, when I was living in South Africa I swore I was going to own one when I was older that and an ostrich lol. Guess which one I grew out of wanting
Nice addition! I've always loved tortoises, when I was living in South Africa I swore I was going to own one when I was older that and an ostrich lol. Guess which one I grew out of wanting
Retic Almost Legendary Joined Jan 3, 2004 Messages 8,284 Reaction score 0 Location Sydney Sep 13, 2012 #6 They are all Geochelone carbonaria, it is just that the Cherry Head is slightly smaller. K3nny said: quick question, are cherry faced red foots an actual strain/sub-species or are they just another marketing ploy? Click to expand...
They are all Geochelone carbonaria, it is just that the Cherry Head is slightly smaller. K3nny said: quick question, are cherry faced red foots an actual strain/sub-species or are they just another marketing ploy? Click to expand...