Triscuit Red Eared Slider (good 1st water turtle), a Adoptable Red-Eared Slider in Baltimore, MD image 1/6
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Triscuit Red Eared Slider (good 1st water turtle)

  • Adult
  • Male
  • Medium
  • turtle
  • Red-Eared Slider

About Triscuit Red Eared Slider (good 1st water turtle)

Baltimore, MD

Species & Breed

turtle
Red-Eared Slider

Physical Traits

Adult
Male
Medium
Brown, Yellow, Black

Behavior

Triscuit Red Eared Slider (good 1st water turtle)’s Compatibility

    This pet has unknown compatibility with kids.

    This pet has unknown compatibility with dogs.

    This pet has unknown compatibility with cats.

    This pet has unknown compatibility with other animals.

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Triscuit Red Eared Slider (good 1st water turtle)'s Story

Please read everything below before contacting MATTS. Most of your questions will be answered below.<br/><br/>I'm a young adult male typical red-eared slider turtle for adoption in the Baltimore, MD, area, with transport available to York and Harrisburg, PA. I am an aquatic turtle which means I have to live and eat in the water. I'd make a good first pet aquatic turtle, since I'm hardy and could live in a 55 gallon tank. <br/><br/>I'm about 5" long but could grow another inch or two. I'm probably around 7 years old, but could live another 10 or 25. For now, I would like at least a 55 gallon aquarium, although larger is nice, too. A 50 gallon Rubbermaid stock tank would be great, and those cost less than an aquarium. I'll also need a basking platform where I can haul out of the water and sit under a heat light to dry off, a UVB light, a good filter (home-made or external canister preferred), and if my water gets below 72F at night, a water heater. Pictures of examples of enclosures are included with my profile picture.<br/><br/>I eat pellets such as Omega One, Mazuri, and ZooMed Maintenance, and greens such as leaf lettuce and edible weeds. <br/><br/>I'm for adoption because my tank mate in my old home, a larger female slider, was being a jerk and injured me, but I'm all healed up.<br/><br/>Local pick-up is by appointment on Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday in downtown Harrisburg or in Red Lion on Saturdays. Transport is available to Baltimore, MD, on weekdays or to Parkton, MD, on weekends. Shipping is possible if the adopter pays for shipping (usually $35 - $70 depending on location). Once you've completed the application and emailed it back as an attachment or in the body of an e-mail, the adoptions coordinator will go over it, and if everything is good, you'll be asked to create an enclosure if you don't already have one, and send pictures of the enclosure. Once that's reviewed, MATTS will contact you to arrange a pick-up or shipping time/location.<br/><br/>If you're in NJ, my adoption contract serves as a sales receipt so you can get a permit for a turtle. https://www.state.nj.us/dep/fgw/exotic_apps.htm<br/><br/>A good e-book for beginners needing to learning about aquatic turtles is http://tfhpublications.com/reptile/redeared-sliders-animal-planet-pet-care-library.html<br/><br/>There's a great in-depth book that can be downloaded for FREE at https://www.lulu.com/shop/richard-lunsford/captive-care-of-north-american-water-turtles/ebook/product-17551523.html <br/><br/>IF INTERESTED IN ADOPTING ME, PLEASE E-MAIL <br/> matts_adoptions@hotmail.com TO REQUEST AN APPLICATION; please INCLUDE YOUR CITY AND STATE in the e-mail, since not all turtles are legal in all states. <br/><br/>Like turtles but can't have one? Want to help? <br/>1) You can share my profile on social media and share www.matts-turtles.org so people can take better care of their turtles and help wild turtles stay wild. <br/>2) MATTS has educational fliers (photos) to share on social media if you email matts_adoptions@hotmail.com to request them.<br/>3) Share our "Monster You Made" video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X_935eZl84k on social media.<br/>4) MATTS also accepts tax-deductible donations at MATTS, P.O. Box 341, Highland, MD 20777, or through PayPal at http://www.matts-turtles.org/support.html<br/>Rescue is funded by donations only, and we find homes for over 100 animals a year.<br/>Thank you!

Please read everything below before contacting MATTS. Most of your questions will be answered below.

I'm a young adult male typical red-eared slider turtle for adoption in the Baltimore, MD, area, with transport available to York and Harrisburg, PA. I am an aquatic turtle which means I have to live and eat in the water. I'd make a good first pet aquatic turtle, since I'm hardy and could live in a 55 gallon tank.

I'm about 5" long but could grow another inch or two. I'm probably around 7 years old, but could live another 10 or 25. For now, I would like at least a 55 gallon aquarium, although larger is nice, too. A 50 gallon Rubbermaid stock tank would be great, and those cost less than an aquarium. I'll also need a basking platform where I can haul out of the water and sit under a heat light to dry off, a UVB light, a good filter (home-made or external canister preferred), and if my water gets below 72F at night, a water heater. Pictures of examples of enclosures are included with my profile picture.

Please read everything below before contacting MATTS. Most of your questions will be answered below.

I'm a young adult male typical red-eared slider turtle for adoption in the Baltimore, MD, area, with transport available to York and Harrisburg, PA. I am an aquatic turtle which means I have to live and eat in the water. I'd make a good first pet aquatic turtle, since I'm hardy and could live in a 55 gallon tank.

I'm about 5" long but could grow another inch or two. I'm probably around 7 years old, but could live another 10 or 25. For now, I would like at least a 55 gallon aquarium, although larger is nice, too. A 50 gallon Rubbermaid stock tank would be great, and those cost less than an aquarium. I'll also need a basking platform where I can haul out of the water and sit under a heat light to dry off, a UVB light, a good filter (home-made or external canister preferred), and if my water gets below 72F at night, a water heater. Pictures of examples of enclosures are included with my profile picture.

I eat pellets such as Omega One, Mazuri, and ZooMed Maintenance, and greens such as leaf lettuce and edible weeds.

I'm for adoption because my tank mate in my old home, a larger female slider, was being a jerk and injured me, but I'm all healed up.

Local pick-up is by appointment on Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday in downtown Harrisburg or in Red Lion on Saturdays. Trans

How To Adopt

Triscuit Red... was listed as Adoptable by Mid-Atlantic Turtle and Tortoise Society
How can I adopt Triscuit Red...?
Click the Start Your Inquiry button, and share some preliminary details with Mid-Atlantic Turtle and Tortoise Society. They may then ask for more details or an official application prior to an adoption. If you're a match, they'll reach out with next steps and timing.
When can I meet Triscuit Red...?
If you've submitted an inquiry, Mid-Atlantic Turtle and Tortoise Society will review your information and may ask you to fill out an official application. If you're a good fit for Triscuit Red..., they'll reach out to set up a meeting.
What if I have more questions about the adoption process?
Just reach out directly to Mid-Atlantic Turtle and Tortoise Society, and they'll be happy to help!
Mid-Atlantic Turtle and Tortoise Society's Adoption Policy
Please DO NOT CALL until after you've emailed to request an application. INCLUDE YOUR CITY and STATE when contacting MATTS. Not all turtles are legal in all states, and we need to know your location to know if you will be legally able to adopt a specific turtle. Please e-mail matts_adoptions@hotmail.com to request an application. We'll email you the application with recommended reading. Once the application is returned to MATTS, we'll go over it and might make some recommendations or ask more questions. If everything looks good, we'll ask you to complete an enclosure for the turtle or tortoise and send pictures of it. If everything looks good, we'll schedule a date and time for you to pick up your new pet or have it shipped when possible. Our turtles come with a no sale, no trade adoption contract upon adoption. Shipping is possible if temperatures allow, via FedEx next day shipping, for delivery on a Wednesday or Thursday. We've been shipping turtles for 20 years, and it's very humane, and better than how many turtles are transported to pet stores. Adopters must pay for shipping, and depending on location and turtle size, shipping may be between $50 and $130 for a typical turtle. In NJ, the state requires you to obtain a $10 Individual Hobby permit after getting a turtle. It's a fairly easy permit to get, and our adoption contract serves as a receipt needed to prove you didn't take the turtle from the wild. Visit https://dep.nj.gov/njfw/wildlife/exotic-and-nongame-wildlife-permit-applications/ to apply for a permit. See https://dep.nj.gov/njfw/wildlife/exotic-and-nongame-species-permit-faqs/ if you have questions. In Maryland our adoption contract serves as a receipt needed to prove you didn't take the turtle from the wild. Maryland regulations can be found at https://dnr.maryland.gov/wildlife/Pages/Licenses/captive.aspx NY residents would need a special educational permit from the DEC to keep any Terrapene species of box turtle or any native NY state reptile. https://dec.ny.gov/regulatory/permits-licenses/fish-wildlife-plant/special-licenses/collect-possess-sell https://extapps.dec.ny.gov/docs/wildlife_pdf/lcpee16.pdf OH requires a permit for native reptiles and a native turtle would need to be microchipped if it's over 4". Eastern Box Turtles cannot be adopted to VA, GA, WV, PA, or most points north of PA on the eastern shore due to regulations in those states, although you can have a box turtle in CT. NY residents would need a special educational permit from the DEC to keep a box turtle. Red-eared sliders cannot be adopted to VA, WV, or FL.

Triscuit Red Eared Slider (good 1st water turtle) is from Mid-Atlantic Turtle and Tortoise Society

[Baltimore, MD]

Our Mission
Please note, we DO NOT have a shelter. All fostering is done from our homes. Conservation, Education, Adoption. We are an all-volunteer, 501(c)(3) non-profit organization founded in February, 1997, directed by concerned hobbyists and professionals, who saw a need to reach out to the public and improve the conditio...
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