I deleted my previous comment because I called Nina a "he." What I wanted to say is that you have created a beautiful home for her and that I know she appreciates it! Do you really know ... he/she????
Wow, Mr. S.! I remember your early pictures of Nina and can see how she's flourishing under your care. I've never seen such a healthy-looking anole. A cover girl for sure. Congratulations!
Sure, but now she's turning into a diva: the crickets have to all be of a certain size, species, and temperature, and she'll trash the dressing room if there's even one spider. . . .
Hard to say. I don't think she's much bigger than she was in March, but all the plants have changed in size a lot more than she could have, so it makes direct comparison difficult.
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Lynn P. Griffith, Jr. Tropical Foliage Plants: a Grower's Guide (Amazon • B&N) Lynn P. Griffith, Jr. Tropical Foliage Plants: a Grower's Guide, 2nd Ed. (Amazon • B&N • Powell's)
Mr_Subjunctive used to work at a family-owned greenhouse / garden center in Iowa City, IA. As of 16 December 2021, he has 1234 houseplants, which is too damn many. Most are Schlumbergeras.
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14 comments:
He is darling!
Great pic. Nina is cute!
I deleted my previous comment because I called Nina a "he." What I wanted to say is that you have created a beautiful home for her and that I know she appreciates it! Do you really know ... he/she????
Yes: we're fairly sure she's a she. It's a variable species, but allegedly only females have the diamond pattern down the center of the back.
Nina is fully grown? Looks like she's enjoying the sun on her back...or is that grow lighting? An unusual pet for sure ;)
She's adorable! :-)
Wow, Mr. S.! I remember your early pictures of Nina and can see how she's flourishing under your care. I've never seen such a healthy-looking anole. A cover girl for sure. Congratulations!
That's one great shot - good lighting, nice pattern and a model that would be a star in any lineup.
our friend Ben / Anonymous:
Sure, but now she's turning into a diva: the crickets have to all be of a certain size, species, and temperature, and she'll trash the dressing room if there's even one spider. . . .
She looks bigger - is that just a trick of the lens? Or is she growing up?
Hard to say. I don't think she's much bigger than she was in March, but all the plants have changed in size a lot more than she could have, so it makes direct comparison difficult.
She looks happy, if a lizard can look happy.
She is so pretty! She looks happy :)
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