To take proper care of your backyard lizard, you will need to identify what genus and species this lizard belongs to. For example, you are likely to encounter a Western fence lizard in southern California, or a common collared lizard in many dry states and so on. There are countless of various lizards that you might see in various countries of the world. If you are unsure of species, try to ask around and show pictures to those that might know.
Once you know the type of a lizard you have in your backyard, you will be able to learn more about its needs and care. Lizards can be omnivorous eating both bugs and vegetation , herbivorous eating vegetation and carnivorous and insectivorous meat and bugs.
Depending on what your lizard is, you will need to offer specific treats if you wish. Most wild or backyard lizard find their own food, but you can also help it and offer more fresh greens or even bugs. If your backyard lizard looks healthy and of normal weight, you can sometimes offer it treats.
Food is often one of the way to build trust with a lizard. It has to associate you with good things. If your lizard lives in your backyard, it needs to eat there too. If you attract more bugs, your lizard will have more to eat. All edible berry plants are fine. Wild caught bugs can get in contact with pesticides and other chemicals and harm your backyard lizard.
Both wild baby lizards and adults will be able to find food for themselves. For wild baby lizards it can be harder, but they will feed on smaller live bugs that they can find and eat.
If you want your backyard lizard to trust you and stay, make sure you have a bowl with fresh water at all times. The lizard is very likely to drink from a fountain or a water dish. To make the lizard stay in your backyard, you must make it feel safe. And to do that, you need to provide it spots to hide. The mid-'80s favorite "Bitchin' Camaro" already demonstrated that ability plenty of times over.
Portraying two guys yammering about Doors cover bands and "going down to the shore" before finally getting to the main point -- the way-cool car of the title -- it somehow finds the lost gap between pseudo-jazz grooves and punky snottiness. As left-field a fluke hit single as it gets, its mix of bad taste, rock star mockery, and stoner humor still works well.
The opening track, "Tiny Town," is a quick thrash-and-scream about small minds in small towns, and the blatant idiocy of "Takin' Retards to the Zoo," which is about just what it says it is, finds the Milkmen 's tongues planted firmly in their cheeks.
The reggae-tinged "Gorilla Girl" is about a choice in sweethearts that meets with parental disapproval, while the tense, nervous bite of "Right Wing Pigeons" trashes the Reagan administration with style and smirks. Semi-seriousness crops up on the wistfully poppy "Dean's Dream," about "a girl with long blonde hair," and the instrumental finale "Tugena," which shows that when they want to, the Milkmen can rock out with the best of them. Never too heavy but deeper than expected, Big Lizard captures these disaffected class clowns getting it out of their system with energy.
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