Would you roast (and, of course, eat too) an armadillo in great famine?
Would you roast (and, of course, eat too) an armadillo in great famine?
I have 4 armadillo lizards, and a Corn snake. 2 armadillo lizards are fully grown, and 2 are 6 months, and the snake is around 2-3 years old. I had a bearded dragon for a few years, but something caused him to die. I got him fully grown. We still have the cage and everything(of course cleaned out). I really want another bearded dragon, and the pet store down the street is selling one. He is a few months old i would assume. (hes not a baby size, but not full grown). I REALLY want to buy the bearded dragon, and I’m going to use my own money. Any suggestions to convince my parents to allow me to buy him/her?
… I have a job cleaning septic tanks all day but I might be able to get another job picking up dead animals off the roads across the entire county. Do you think this will be a step up or possibly even worse? It is in the dead of summer and a lot of those dead dogs, racoons, horses, deer and armadillos have their guts splattered all across the road and are crawling with maggots. Of course I could keep the really fresh kills and cook them and it would be nice to come home after a hard day of pumping septic tanks and not have all the neighborhood dogs gag and puke when I get near them. The pay is almost exactly the same so, any thoughts?
Posted in Armadillo
Tagged armadillos, county, course, day, Dead, dead animals, dead dogs, deer, entire county, fresh kills, gag, guts, home, horses, job, lot, maggots, neighborhood dogs, puke, road, septic tanks, step, summer
Would you roast (and, of course, eat too) an armadillo in great famine?