Saturday, August 21, 2010

I am thinging about geting a pet.but i dont know what to get!please write some advice quick! need help?

please help me decide what pet i should get.i need helpI am thinging about geting a pet.but i dont know what to get!please write some advice quick! need help?
A rat. Not hard to take care of. Feed it. Give it water. Clean it's cage. But get two, they get lonely.











Interested in adopting? Check out: http://www.freewebs.com/pet--adoptions/I am thinging about geting a pet.but i dont know what to get!please write some advice quick! need help?
I think you should get a pet that you decide you could take care of and could make time to feed it and spend time with it.If you want a loyal loving companion a fish or snail aren't good choices.if you just want a pet to get right away just get a simple animal ranging from a dog to a hamster. If you want a excotic pet or a fish hey it is up to you. But if you can try looking a your local animal shelter and adopt a animal instead of getting a high priced perfectly unabused animal compared to a animal that has gotten a second chance.But if you want my answer I would get a labbrador they are neasy to care for and to train let alone a loyal waterloving copainon that can fetch ,swim and even be trained to simply sit why you give it a bath.But don't get a animal because someone told you to get one. you choose a pet that suits you.
it really depends on what your lifestyle is like. the fact that you need advice quick shows that you just want a pet and arent thinking of its needs. if loads of prople say to get a snake will you go out and get one without research or preperation? i would suggest a ferret as long as you do alot of thinking and research...or a goldfish
What I would suggest is writing down a list of the things that you want in a pet (because it's hard to give you a suggestion with no information). If you live in a small apartment, for example, you're not going to want to get a dog that requires a lot of energy and room to run. Think about what you can provide to a pet in terms of living space, your budget for vet care, how dependent you'd like them to be (a cat is more independent than a dog), etc. Don't just go out and pick an animal because it's cute - that is how animals end up in shelters. Think about all the things that bringing home a pet mean - financially, emotionally, etc. This will help you make the best choice for you and your future pet.





A shelter is always the best place to start your search, too - there are plenty of animals that need loving homes. Try www.petfinder.com for a list of shelters and pets near you.

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