I recommend volunteering at a sanctuary to determine if it’s something you really want. Having a pet fox is practically a full time job. Most people can’t handle it, and many end up in sanctuaries.
You can have pet foxes. They’re not great pets, they’re loud, they smell bad, they will probably pee on everything, but if captive bred theyre quite tame and there’s a particular line that came from a domestication experiment who are especially tame.
I have pictures (maybe I’ll post some, despite the ick factor) where this fox laid down to sleep right next to a pillow it had shit all over. And we’re not talking pebbles, we’re talking the runs and it was a nightmare to clean. It was tempting to burn the thing… I also have to clean massive piles of fox poop off the decking on a regular basis.
Of course, one captive-bred will likely be better, but I absolutely agree with you they won’t make great pets.
They are cute, but frankly, that is just about sufficient to let me tolerate them sleeping in the gazebo and thoroughly washing stuff afterward, but not nearly sufficient to make me consider one as a pet.
Pet dogs also eat poo on occasion, also without any underlying problem, so I really don’t think there’s any reason to think that far less domesticated species where it is well established would just stop. I’m sure you can reduce it, especially if it has a nicer food source, but still, an animal with far less history of domestication seems like a recipe for amplification of all the potential issues you don’t want to deal with.
Pica is eating things that are not food, but as pointed out in the article I linked, eating dog poo is providing a significant source of nutrition for foxes. In those circumstances, it by definition is not pica.
No need to make personal attacks. Cecotrophy is a common phenomenon in certain animals. I don’t know specifically about foxes but it wouldn’t be a stretch if it was common behavior for them. Do you have any sources that suggest otherwise?
NGL I’ve always wanted a pet fox
I recommend volunteering at a sanctuary to determine if it’s something you really want. Having a pet fox is practically a full time job. Most people can’t handle it, and many end up in sanctuaries.
You can have pet foxes. They’re not great pets, they’re loud, they smell bad, they will probably pee on everything, but if captive bred theyre quite tame and there’s a particular line that came from a domestication experiment who are especially tame.
To the “they smell bad” bit, I’ll add two things:
I have pictures (maybe I’ll post some, despite the ick factor) where this fox laid down to sleep right next to a pillow it had shit all over. And we’re not talking pebbles, we’re talking the runs and it was a nightmare to clean. It was tempting to burn the thing… I also have to clean massive piles of fox poop off the decking on a regular basis.
There is this: Dog poo forms a significant part of foxes’ diet
Of course, one captive-bred will likely be better, but I absolutely agree with you they won’t make great pets.
They are cute, but frankly, that is just about sufficient to let me tolerate them sleeping in the gazebo and thoroughly washing stuff afterward, but not nearly sufficient to make me consider one as a pet.
Domestic ones will not lay on their own shit… it sounds like that fox was pretty sick anyway? They also don’t eat dog poo.
The smell you’re dealing with is just a strong musk. It’s not pleasant, but it’s not faeces.
Pet dogs also eat poo on occasion, also without any underlying problem, so I really don’t think there’s any reason to think that far less domesticated species where it is well established would just stop. I’m sure you can reduce it, especially if it has a nicer food source, but still, an animal with far less history of domestication seems like a recipe for amplification of all the potential issues you don’t want to deal with.
Pica is an issue that you can work on. No animal should have it.
Pica is eating things that are not food, but as pointed out in the article I linked, eating dog poo is providing a significant source of nutrition for foxes. In those circumstances, it by definition is not pica.
Poo is not food, I’m extremely concerned that you’ve got to adulthood without anyone telling you this. Do not eat poo.
No need to make personal attacks. Cecotrophy is a common phenomenon in certain animals. I don’t know specifically about foxes but it wouldn’t be a stretch if it was common behavior for them. Do you have any sources that suggest otherwise?