My breeder said to be very careful with those. Some people have let their vets give vaccines to their fennecs and it killed them. If he needs a vaccine she should be contacted first to make sure it is safe.Does he have to get vaccines?
It's the same thing with certain tick killing solutions. One kind that is safe for dogs will kill a fennec.
The "potentially dangeorous" is what I looked at, since no one could construe a fennec fox as being dangerous or life-threatening. They don't get over three pounds. It is best to contact the officials in your state to make sure though.Potentially dangerous species include the following orders: Primates; Carnivora (nondomestic dogs and cats, bears);
New Jersey
Doesn't a fox qualify as a Carnivora-nondomestic? Just wondering.
Interesting... not sure I have the patience to train him as he's very energetic and doesn't focus. I can't get him to sit for a treat because he's too busy climbing the walls! :oAs far as training, you can train just about anything with precise operant conditioning. You just have to be patient and very precise about when you reward. Once you get the first steps down of establishing the reward cue, you can easily start shaping behavior and even extinguish unwanted behaviors via "off cue" extinguishing. That way there's no negative conditioning but you get the results you want.
Oh yeah I heard about that. I also read a couple of scientific papers in one of my college biology courses regarding how they were domesticated.Silver Fox. Not a fennec fox, but a fox nonetheless, and they are domesticated. i personally thought it was interesting to read about their domestication process.
They are very expensive too...
Most of the time he is just nipping. You can barely feel it. However sometimes he does have abrupt mood shifts and will snarl and bite down hard. It's hard to gauge when he will do that, but I'm getting a better feel for it.That fox is so cute! Is the biting just being playful, being aggressive or is it something they get over as they become more tame/get to know you better? And you said he plays with your cat? Does that go well? How long did it take them to get acclimated to each other?
I'm also getting faster in moving my limbs away. (He doesn't just bite hands. He has bitten down hard on my forearm before)
As for the fox and the cat, she was fine with him when they were playing at my aunt's house, which is where they were introduced. After we went back to my house (where she had established herself for about three months - I adopted her), she was less fond of him. She doesn't hurt him though, and never has. He sometimes bites her tail or charges her and barks and she will hiss and swipe at him but he always comes back for more, so she can't be hitting too hard. Sometimes she chases him though. She's had plenty of opportunities (from what I've seen) to seriously hurt him and she hasn't.








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