Mario Schweiger wrote:but you never should trust a "wild" animal, doesnt matter which species
Yes, I'm fully aware of that. One can never be sure what could come to an animal's mind in a certain moment.
Mario Schweiger wrote:but you never should trust a "wild" animal, doesnt matter which species
Tom Hoogesteger wrote:Just believe me. I am a professional taxidermist and actually one of the few in Europe specializing in reptiles.
Berislav Horvatic wrote:I rather prefer them alive... painted by Nature/God.
Ilian Velikov wrote:Berislav Horvatic wrote:I rather prefer them alive... painted by Nature/God.
Obviously, them and every other living thing...although not sure why you put two options for the painter
Mario Schweiger wrote:Berislav Horvatic wrote:And they don't bite, provided you hold them really gently.
you wouldnt be the first, dying from Heloderma bite - even specialists, working for years with the species.
I have never been called to attend a case of Gila monster bite, and I don't want to be.
I think a man who is fool enough to get bitten by a Gila monster ought to die. The
creature is so sluggish and slow of movement that the victim of its bite is compelled
to help largely in order to get bitten.
— Dr. Ward, Arizona Graphic, September 23, 1899
Berislav Horvatic wrote:Of course God is dead, Nietzsche said
that quite clearly more than a century ago, but it takes some time to get rid of the corpse...
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