The Pet Tree House - Where Pets Are Family Too : Kangaroos The Pet Tree House - Where Pets Are Family Too : Kangaroos
Showing posts with label Kangaroos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kangaroos. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Children's Author, Julia Heckathorn’s Pet Kangaroo Wears Clothes and Teaches Children About Nature


Julia Heckathorn, 28, adopted two-year-old Boomeroo, a kangaroo from a farm in Texas, when she was just 3 weeks old.  The pair have been inseparable ever since.

Boomeroo wears human clothing and lets out an excited squeak whenever Julia walks into a room. She says that Boomeroo loves to cuddle.

Julia is a children's author and takes Boomeroo with her whenever she visits a school. She hopes this will help teach the students more about nature.

She says Boomeroo loves to wear clothes and  has a wardrobe full of tops and dresses, that she purchased from baby stores.

Boomeroo got so big that they had to  built a temperature controlled barn in their garden. She sleeps with the other animals, an anteater, named Noche, four sugar glider possums, and a cat, named Larry.

Although Boomeroo sleeps in the barn at night, she spends her days hopping around the house and garden with Larry. She loves staring out the window, and sleeping and sleeping at Julia's feet while she writes.

"When Boomeroo was younger I used to carry her around in a bag with me to the supermarket so she could get used to seeing people," she said.

"She follows me everywhere. When she sees me, she makes this little sound, like an excited chortle, just as kangaroos would do in the wild to locate their mothers," she said.

Describing the kangaroo's love of human attire, she said: "When we first got Boomeroo, she was wearing a little shirt and has worn clothes ever since. The clothes give her comfort as a thunder shirt would give comfort to a dog."

Kangaroos are social animals, living in groups called mobs, so when Boomeroo was a joey, Juila also adopted Larry the cat, to give her 24-hour companionship.

Talking about the animals' unorthodox friendship, she said: "Boomeroo and Larry get along very well.  They are now the best of friends, and do everything together. They eat grass, lay together, and watch the birds. It's adorable."

Julia said that whenever she visits a school with one of her unusual animals, the childrens eyes, light up with excitement, and they become more interested in learning about conservation.


















FOLLOW US!
/

Thursday, June 21, 2018

Are Sugar Gliders Good Pets?


Sugar gliders are popular exotic pets. They're small, cute, and unique little animals. But just as you would with any other exotic pet, a potential sugar glider owner should be aware of the care requirements and personality traits of a sugar glider before getting one. Sugar gliders are a long term commitment, living up to 14 years in captivity, and require a special diet, lots of attention, and space.

Sugar Gliders in the Wild

Baby sugar gliders start life off in their mother’s pouch and are referred to as joeys, just like kangaroos. Because of this unique start to life, sugar gliders are classified as marsupials, not rodents like the similarly looking flying squirrel. 

All wild sugar gliders are from Australia, Indonesia, and New Guinea where they live in tree tops. They get their sweet and airborne name from the food they eat and their characteristic mode of transportation.  Their namesake diet includes nectar and sap from trees and they are often seen gliding between branches using unique flaps of skin called patagium. Sugar gliders are omnivorous, so in addition to the nectar and sap, they will also eat both plant material and meat including fruit, insects, and even small birds or rodents.

To read more on this story, click here: Are Sugar Gliders Good Pets?


FOLLOW US!
/

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

URGENT! The International Fund for Animal Welfare Needs Your Help - Do You Sew? Can You Help? - Australia Needs Joey Pouches For Its Injured Wildlife


The International Fund for Animal Welfare has today launched “Project Pouch,” an initiative to help injured kangaroos, possums and wallabies recover from injury suffered during the recent South Australian bush fires.

The IFAW now have a stockroom full of koala mittens - and have now turned their attention to injured kangaroos.

If you sew and would like to help these animals, I have included a link to a pattern for you to use, and the address to send them to below.

Material required must be 100% soft cotton bed sheets and flannelette.

To read more on this story, click here: Australia Needs Joey Pouches For Its Injured Wildlife - Do You Sew? Can You Help?


Please send your finished pouch liners to: IFAW 6 Belmore Street, Surry Hills NSW 2010

For the pattern, click here:
http://www.ifaw.org/sites/default/files/default/JOEY_POUCH%20INSTRUCTIONS_A4_R4.pdf

Website: International Fund for Animal Welfare


Please Share and Thank You! FOLLOW US!
/