Showing posts with label Sissy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sissy. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Our Yearly Tortoise Checkup

Spring means "Tortoise Checkups" and so I made an appointment to take all 5 in today. And then Junior went along to get his second Calcitonin shot. It took two laundry baskets to transport them all. Thankfully, my daughter went along with me to carry one of the baskets. 

Here's a line of torts-- Sissy (box turtle but honorary tortoise) at the top, then Leo the Russian, Curly Q the desert tortoise, and Otis the cherry head (red foot) tortoise at the end. 



All of them got weighed and checked. Otis & Leo & Sissy got beak trims.


Leo took some persuasion to come out of his shell so we could trim his beak. He was not thrilled. See?


Otis wanted to mount all the other tortoises and we had to keep pulling him off of them.


Curly Q peed all over the counter & floor & Dr Folland's tie. I told him he should keep a backup tie in his office on days I come. The last visit with Norman started with Norman projectile pooping onto his tie too. ;)

Sissy got a few dead spots of shell scraped off and we checked her nails. She's missing most of her toe nails on her front feet. And she obviously got bit by a dog at some point in her life too. She's a very sweet box turtle. I don't normally like box turtles, but I really like her. She fits in the zoo well.


Georgie has tripled her weight since last year. She's my leopard tortoise who stayed in the laundry basket for most of the visit. She is not social and doesn't like to interact with anyone. I didn't even get a picture of her.

Junior got his second Calcitonin injection which will help pull calcium back into his bones. I watched him poop out urate pieces this morning but no fecal matter. He still has a lump in his belly, but it is actually smaller and on the opposite side of his belly than it was before. So strange! He's a lot more alert and aware than he was before. But his bones are still rubber. He'll have a long road to recovery.


The vet's staff blocked out a whole hour for me so we could get everyone checked in, examined, and treated. We stayed right on time. It was great!

While it was expensive to have them all checked (just over $500 for all 5 & the shot), it's important to me to keep my regulars updated in the vet's system. They become established clients and we can track weights and such.

Sunday, March 12, 2017

Sissy, rescue 174

I thought it would be great to call the two box turtles I took to Idaho "Sissy" and "Sassy" since one was shy & one was *not!* But turns out that the Sassy one was actually a boy.

That's okay. He went to live with the owners of the Land Turtle & Tortoise rescue in Idaho who are very skilled at caring for feisty, rambunctious, and busy ornate box turtles.

Sissy is a sweetheart and rather timid. She is a healthy and good looking normal box turtle and she came back home with me. For now, she'll stay here with me. If that becomes to much, I have a good friend who adores box turtles and will gladly adopt her.



I gotta read up on box turtle care again so I make sure I'm doing the right things for Sissy. It's been a couple years since I had a box turtle (who was an ornate turtle who wanted to feed on my flesh & drink my blood; meaning: he was *not* nice).

She's already enjoying the sunshine on the kitchen floor and is learning where to go to get food & water.

We are ALL counting down the days until the tortoises can be outside all day.