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    Hamsters for kids (and parents)

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Social Time, Outings & Games
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    • S Offline
      super_dad
      last edited by

      My daughter's begging for a hamster. :lol:..which will probably die under her care. To date, she has killed a few fishes, 3 tortises, 1 praying mantis, few grasshoppers, 1 starfish etc.....

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      • ChiefKiasuC Offline
        ChiefKiasu
        last edited by

        super_dad:
        She's begging for a hamster. :lol:..which will probably die under her care. To date, she has killed a few fishes, 3 tortises, 1 praying mantis, few grasshoppers, 1 starfish etc.....

        No mammals yet. That's good news. But hamsters are cute under you witness them eating their young... it grossed me out so much that I never want to touch one again.

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        • S Offline
          super_dad
          last edited by

          Strangely, hamsters would only eat their young if the mother sense that the environment is not condusive. It is nature way of preserving the energy for another generation.


          Hmm…we should have a thread to discuss about animals and kids.

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          • P Offline
            phantom
            last edited by

            Getting your kid to rear a pet and write a blog about them seems like a good idea.


            But I have bad experience rearing a hamster. They get smelly and hard to manage. Sometimes they even bite, so may not be safe to be handled by kids

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            • S Offline
              super_dad
              last edited by

              Btw...you are talking to a hamster expert here :).


              I had a whole hamster farm previously and was selling the offsprings and supplying them to shops 🙂

              Hamster come in a few varieties..some of which are aggressive ie they bite. There are some that are tame like anything. No matter how you squeeze them, they don't sink their sharp nibbly teeth into your hands. You have to look out for those. The sapphires and the winterwhites are the tame ones. the campbells are the naughty ones. Robos are usually ok, but they are quick like lightning...and it is very hard to hold them still and stroke them. 🙂

              As for the stink, the hamsters don't like it too. You have to be discipline to keep the cage clean. And that will take lots of work. Using those shavings that absorb and deodorize the smell will help.

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              • ChiefKiasuC Offline
                ChiefKiasu
                last edited by

                super_dad:
                Btw...you are talking to a hamster expert here :).


                I had a whole hamster farm previously and was selling the offsprings and supplying them to shops 🙂

                ...
                Wah so solid! I had a couple of hamsters too... don't really know what they are but they are very light grey and white with slitty eyes. Not sapphires or winterwhites for sure. And they bite even if they are not provoked... u just have to reach out to them.

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                • S Offline
                  super_dad
                  last edited by

                  Lost touch with hamsters already...but there are many variants...believe or not, the aggressive trait is hereditary..it is passed on from parents to offspring. So, character sometimes is inborned.


                  Therefore Kiasu parents will have Kiasu children. 😄

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                  • ChiefKiasuC Offline
                    ChiefKiasu
                    last edited by

                    super_dad:
                    ...

                    Therefore Kiasu parents will have Kiasu children. 😄
                    That's probably true. Some gene thing going on here. By the way, I split this thread to a new one in case the original poster screams and wonder what hamsters have to do with creative writing :shock:

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                    • P Offline
                      phantom
                      last edited by

                      super_dad:
                      Lost touch with hamsters already...but there are many variants...believe or not, the aggressive trait is hereditary..it is passed on from parents to offspring. So, character sometimes is inborned.


                      Therefore Kiasu parents will have Kiasu children. 😄
                      Oh, you are going into the gene thing. So it come to the question of can a child from a average parents get nurture into some talent? That's a hard questions. But seems like it is easier to be seen in animals that lots of characters are hereditary.

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                      • W Offline
                        wet
                        last edited by

                        i have been severely loaded since young for my insurance because of the medical history of both my parents (high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke), although I exhibit none (hopefully never 🙂 ) of the conditions. but it's a great way for insurance companies to make money by blaming the parents.

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