THANK YOU FOR SUBSCRIBING
01. Check your email inbox
02. Open the confirmation email
03. Click the confirmation link
04. Add our email address to your safe sender list


WOULD YOU LIKE A COMPLETE GUIDE FOR Red Ear Slider Turtles?
Red Ear Slider Turtles are social creatures that like to hang around with their own kind whenever possible. They may not have a huge reputation for not making any particular or distinguishing sound, but they do in fact communicate with each other through touch and vibrations! One of the three subspecies of the Pond Slider, the Red Ear Slider (RES) Turtle is not only popular in the United States; it has also gained great popularity around the world!
Red Ear Slider Turtles are social creatures that like to hang around with their own kind whenever possible. They may not have a huge reputation for not making any particular or distinguishing sound, but they do in fact communicate with each other through touch and vibrations! One of the three subspecies of the Pond Slider, the Red Ear Slider (RES) Turtle is not only popular in the United States; it has also gained great popularity around the world!
Connect With People Interested in Red Ear Slider Turtles.
WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING ABOUT THIS BOOK
✭✭✭✭✭
Red Ear Sliders as pets.
Great book gives you a good insight into having Red Ear Sliders as pets. How you care for them. And what to feed them.
– JOE SR
MEET LOLLY BROWN

As a child, Brown first learned about fish and aquaria when her father brought home a 10-gallon aquarium as a surprise for his daughter. Within months, the father-daughter team graduated to a 120-gallon tank and were immersed in the intricacies of tank population management.
“We had that go-big-or-go-home mentality common to the hobby,” Brown said. “Now I look back and think about what we did to Mama’s living room! She was very patient with us.”
Brown’s fascination with animals continued in college, where she took numerous field biology and wildlife classes that allowed her to view the behavior of many species in their native habitats.
She calls this period of her life the “rodent years,” since her only apartment roommates were two hamsters, Hemingway and Leo (Tolstoy). “I also adopted a Guinea pig purely because I couldn’t stand the conditions in the pet store,” she said. “Trust me, I was in no way prepared to care for Molly and I had to learn fast!”
“The only other time I went into a pet adoption blind,” Brown added, “I came home with two green anole lizards. Then I found out I was going to have to feed them live crickets. Read More