You're viewing a single thread.
Hard for me to understand people having several pets. I had one and it was somewhat demanding
21 0 ReplyThe threshold that someone considers "too many animals" is always the number they have plus one.
25 0 ReplyPermanently Deleted
7 0 ReplyFor us it’s feet
Pet feet cannot outnumber human feet, full stop. Otherwise you lose control and are no longer in charge.
It’s a working theory but so far has been accurate.
9 0 ReplyI see a couple of flaws
- Nobody who lives alone is allowed a pet
- If you have a toddler, in this rule that enables you to expand the number of pets, but I'd say a toddler adds to rather than eases the load
11 0 ReplyA person living on their own could have any number of fish, a single bird, any number of snakes, etc.
12 0 ReplyDrake pointing ^^
1 1 Reply
Permanently Deleted
3 0 ReplyMore a loophole or feature. Fish are easy to take care of same with snakes. You can feed em and head out of town without worry etc.
Bird has two legs.
It’s not an actual rule we every invented and then followed. But more, one we ended up realizing waaaay after the fact.
3 0 ReplyDoes one cat only have two feet or do two cats have three?
Or does one human have 4?
2 0 Replythere are a few cats that have 2 feet, even less
1 0 ReplyCat or dog witb back leg wheely basket counts as two legs…
Or bird.
3 0 Reply
Permanently Deleted
1 0 Reply
Soooo, what about pet snakes?
2 0 ReplyThat’s a divide by zero issue. Snakes and fish don’t count against quota.
6 0 Reply
Depending on the pets, sometimes two can be less work than one. They entertain each other and play together, resulting in less destruction and less demand for attention from their owner. That probably all goes out the window with more than two though!
17 0 ReplyFor guinea pigs 2 is the minimum. They get depressed if lonely. They are not that demanding though and more piggies is barely more work
9 0 ReplyYou serve them obediently.
1 0 ReplyWell yes, but cats.
1 0 Reply