hollydolly
SF VIP
- Location
- London England
..instead of trying to make pets out of them in a domestic setting ?
Drives me nuts to see people keeping animals like snakes for example in a 6 foot tank .... and monkeys on chains , and parrots in cages.. these animals are meant to cover many miles in a day as part of their natural existence...
It grieves me to know people are locking up animals that are in no danger from their natural habitat.. and especially animals who are particularly intelligent such as Chimps, parrots.. and yes Octopi...
Today I think takes the biscuit.. as I read another family bemoaning the fact that the ''adopted'' octopus has destroyed their family life..
yep you read it right... an Octopus !
An Oklahoma family had no idea that a birthday gift for their nine-year-old son would lead to the birth of 50 octopus babies, numerous water tanks that took over half of a bathroom, and thousands of dollars on food supplies and water damage repairs.
Cameron Clifford, a 36-year-old dentist, said his son Cal had been obsessed with octopuses since the age of three.
'Every birthday, every Christmas, every holiday, he would always say: 'All I want is an octopus,'' Clifford told the New York Times.
In October, Clifford made a call to a local aquarium store and acquired a female California two-spot octopus for Cal's ninth birthday. They named her Terrance.
Terrance turned out to be larger than expected and soon began laying eggs. Clifford documented the journey on TikTok, where his videos amassed millions of views from 400,000 followers.
But what the family didn't realize at first was that Terrence was actually a female, who started releasing 'a chandelier' of little eggs two months after it arrived.
He was told by experts that the eggs were unfertilized, and the release of eggs only signals the end of the life span of the female octopus.
Until one night in February, Clifford picked up an egg and was absolutely shocked.
'I accidentally popped it, and this droplet comes out and spreads out these tiny tentacles and does three swim strokes across my viewpoint,' he said.
Terrance the octopus ended up hatching a total of 50 babies, and 'all bets went off,' he said.
The family had to arrange 50 separated homes for the unexpected offspring, spend thousands of dollars on clams, crabs, and snails, not to mention the costs to repair the damage to the house from spilled water and a small electrical fire.
Speaking of one particularly messy incident, Clifford said: 'I wish I wouldn't have opened that valve that way and dumped all that dirty seawater onto my kids' white carpet.'
Meanwhile, the desperate father started calling aquariums and research facilities and begging them to take the babies off his hands.
'It's a lot of work,' he said. 'A lot of work and emotion and money and time.'
'I don't know that we've been fully prepared for any of these challenges, but the hope is to re-home as many as we can.
An octopus destroyed a family's home after giving birth to 50 babies
Drives me nuts to see people keeping animals like snakes for example in a 6 foot tank .... and monkeys on chains , and parrots in cages.. these animals are meant to cover many miles in a day as part of their natural existence...
It grieves me to know people are locking up animals that are in no danger from their natural habitat.. and especially animals who are particularly intelligent such as Chimps, parrots.. and yes Octopi...
Today I think takes the biscuit.. as I read another family bemoaning the fact that the ''adopted'' octopus has destroyed their family life..
yep you read it right... an Octopus !
An Oklahoma family had no idea that a birthday gift for their nine-year-old son would lead to the birth of 50 octopus babies, numerous water tanks that took over half of a bathroom, and thousands of dollars on food supplies and water damage repairs.
Cameron Clifford, a 36-year-old dentist, said his son Cal had been obsessed with octopuses since the age of three.
'Every birthday, every Christmas, every holiday, he would always say: 'All I want is an octopus,'' Clifford told the New York Times.
In October, Clifford made a call to a local aquarium store and acquired a female California two-spot octopus for Cal's ninth birthday. They named her Terrance.
Terrance turned out to be larger than expected and soon began laying eggs. Clifford documented the journey on TikTok, where his videos amassed millions of views from 400,000 followers.
But what the family didn't realize at first was that Terrence was actually a female, who started releasing 'a chandelier' of little eggs two months after it arrived.
He was told by experts that the eggs were unfertilized, and the release of eggs only signals the end of the life span of the female octopus.
Until one night in February, Clifford picked up an egg and was absolutely shocked.
'I accidentally popped it, and this droplet comes out and spreads out these tiny tentacles and does three swim strokes across my viewpoint,' he said.
Terrance the octopus ended up hatching a total of 50 babies, and 'all bets went off,' he said.
The family had to arrange 50 separated homes for the unexpected offspring, spend thousands of dollars on clams, crabs, and snails, not to mention the costs to repair the damage to the house from spilled water and a small electrical fire.
Speaking of one particularly messy incident, Clifford said: 'I wish I wouldn't have opened that valve that way and dumped all that dirty seawater onto my kids' white carpet.'
Meanwhile, the desperate father started calling aquariums and research facilities and begging them to take the babies off his hands.
'It's a lot of work,' he said. 'A lot of work and emotion and money and time.'
'I don't know that we've been fully prepared for any of these challenges, but the hope is to re-home as many as we can.
An octopus destroyed a family's home after giving birth to 50 babies
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