RoachKill":3936fsqn said:For "solitary reptiles" BD's sure manage a lot of social adaptability fitting into our families. One example:
Spike's our 7 year old female. She was outside being watched by my wife, when she got freaked by some noisy crows. She chose to run to my wife instead of running into some dense plants. Where the heck did the "Help Mommy!" response come from?
randommonks":32ltljne said:But again that's just me and my experience with Darwin. He's not the most sociable of animals, but has a natural curiosity that rivals even my cat.
alkemisten3":6482hayt said:No, they cannot Love humans, the brain is not developed for that.
I am talking from a scientific standpoint and not some dreamy blaha.
:study:
beardie parents":3ba3r9zx said:Pumpkin Jelly, first off, Miss O was on me and I didn't see her face but my husband did. She was easy to understand. When you bond with your beardies and really get to know them you see things in them that no one else does. Then there is the beardie we saw in a pet store (owned by the pet store owners) named Pumpkin (5yo at the time) I clearly saw her ask me, as I was holding her, "who are you and why are you bothering me?" Beardie's are loving creatures, most of them, and will love you as a young child loves their parents.
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