First Pets:
The Leopard Gecko
Written By Katharine Whittemore
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Behind glam-rock looks hides a shy guy with a gentle disposition who's just looking for someone to love.
If we could have gotten our son a dinosaur, we would have. Will loves dinosaurs more than soccer, more than ketchup, more than his sister's time-outs. A wild guess: You've met a dinosaur nut just like him. That very nut may be doing a lurid setup in your house right this moment, the iguanadons roaring at the diplodocuses, the velociraptors shrieking at the allosauruses. It's a Quiet Riot concert in there. (Can we do a playdate?) You too would get your nut a real dinosaur if it weren't for that pesky extinction 65 million years ago.Instead we got our earnest 6-year-old a kind of lizard. There's some nice logic here, because the word dinosaur means "terrible lizard" (even though dinosaurs weren't lizards and most of them weren't terrible). You must admit there's a certain linkage. The scaly skin, the eerie whip tail, the primeval aura, the carnivorous bent.
Think: Dino lite. Think: Close enough.
Hello, Leopard Geckos
There are many types of lizard, but leopard geckos are it for 5-and-ups. (The overenthusiasm of littler ones clashes with the creature's stately style.) Leos have a gentle disposition, one reason why the Global Gecko Association calls them "in many ways the perfect reptile pet."
And those other reasons? Leos are fetchingly low maintenance, confining their dry waste to one corner of their tank for easy cleanup. Also, they carry no fur-and-feather allergens, which is vital to our Claritin-dosing family. Beyond that, watching one stalk and snap up crickets is mesmerizing, a junior version of a T. rex making short work of a baby psittacosaurus. Plus, they're the glam rockers of pethood, with their velvety, suave, black-and-white leopard-pattern skin.
Leos commonly live up to 20 years, which I realize may be, um, a plus or minus. But that gives you lots of time to enjoy his personality. Ours winks, licks fingers, eagerly sidles out of his den to say hey at dinnertime, and engages in long, Spock-mind-meld staring contests. He's really almost charming.
Lifestyles of the Small & Scaly
Leopard geckos are large enough for kids to hold comfortably (babies start at 3 inches, adults reach 8 to 10). They stress easily, though, so make sure your child moves slowly (and you should always be there to supervise). Approach from the front, so he won't think you're a looming predator and he's the blue-plate special. Put your hand, palm up, in front of him. Let him "taste" your fingers and walk onto your hand; you can nudge his midregion very gently with the other hand to give him the hint.
Like all reptiles — turtles, frogs, salamanders, the whole swamp posse — geckos can carry salmonella bacteria on their skin. If your kids keep their hands out of their mouths while handling the little darlings and wash their hands afterwards, that should ward off this very slight but very real risk.
Leopard geckos do have teeth, but they seldom bear down unless truly provoked. Never grab his head or tail — especially the latter. When threatened, geckos startle their enemies by ejecting their tails, which continue to twitch on the ground. Talk about a party trick! The tail will grow back, but still.
Calcium-dusted crickets and mealworms, available at pet stores, are the mashed potatoes and meat loaf of the leopard gecko (FYI: kids are better at maneuvering decidedly unjumpy mealworms). Leos also eat their own skin (they shed every two to four weeks). I find this to be an 11 on the gross-out meter, but Will is enthralled.
See the basics of keeping lizards
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