hamster care
When you purchased your copy of this ebook, it also came with a Transferrable Master Resale Rights License, granting you permission to resell this ebook for whatever price you deem it worthy of and additionally to pass on this right to those you sell it to.
When you purchased your copy of this ebook, it also came with a Transferrable Master Resale Rights License, granting you permission to resell this ebook for whatever price you deem it worthy of and additionally to pass on this right to those you sell it to. You may sell it as a stand alone product, sell it bundled with other products, include it inside paid membership websites, offer it as a bonus item, or even give it away for free to your subscribers or customers, or anyone you feel might get some value from it. It has been given a suggessted retail value of $14.95, but you may sell it or offer it for free as stated above. The choice is completely left up to you :-) I wish each of you the very best of luck! Tracy Yates
E-Book Emporium Bucks2Earn Ezine P.S. - Links May Not Be Directly Clickable, So You May Need To Use The “Text Tool” Within Acrobat To Copy And Paste The Links To Your Browser Window. Copyright©2005 E-Book Emporium – http://www.e-bookemporium.us Considering A Hamster As A Pet The hamster kept as pet most often is the Golden Hamster, also called Syrian Hamster. So-called Teddybear or Black Bear hamsters are also breeds of golden hamsters. But also four species of smaller hamsters are popular pets, often called dwarf hamsters. These are Roborovski hamster, (Phodopus roborovskii) often called Roborovski, the chinese striped hamster (Cricetulus griseus) and the two subspecies of Phodopus sungorus, the winter white russian dwarf hamster (Phodopus sungorus sungorus) and Campbell's dwarf hamster (Phodopus sungorus campellii). The care of the dwarf hamsters is similar to that of the golden hamster, but there are differences in feeding and housing needs and temperament. Winter whites and Campell's are fairly popular, in the US the campells more so than the whinter whites, while it's other way round in Europe. Roborovski and Chinese striped Hamsters are somewhat more difficult to breed and keep, they are usually only available from breeders, and therefore limited to serious rodentia fans.