Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Where's Gaylord? Pet Owner Offers Reward Of $1,000 To Get Her Pet Iguana Back

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Aug, 2016 01:20 PM
    EDMONTON — An Edmonton woman is offering a reward for the safe return of her pet iguana.
     
    Mary-Ann Holm says Gaylord escaped from her fenced back yard in west Edmonton on Aug. 13 while “basking in the sunshine” with her other pet iguana, Fluffy, and a tortoise.
     
    Holm left the yard to answer the door, and when she returned, Gaylord was gone.
     
    "Very, very unusual. I do this all the time, I've had my one iguana for 14 years, I can leave them outside, I can look at them an hour later and they haven't even moved an inch, so they're generally not that active," Holm said.
     
    Holm had company come over shortly after, and they went searching but had no luck.
     
    The week before Gaylord went missing, Holm brought home a dog.
     
    "He seemed very freaked out about the dog ... I suspect since he's a rescue that he had a bad experience with a dog prior to me getting him."
     
    Holm is worried about him because the weather is getting cooler. 
     
    Gaylord is about a metre and a half long, grey and green in colour, with orange on his legs.
     
    Holm said Gaylord may be hiding in a backyard, under a deck, in a tree or bush or someone scooped him up.
     
    She is offering a reward of $1,000.
     
    Holm says she's always had a fondness for reptiles. She took in Fluffy after the reptile was abandoned in an apartment after a tenant moved out.
     
    She took in Gaylord, who's about five years old, about three years ago after he was rescued from being kept in an aquarium "way too small for his size" and had lost part of his tail due to some injury. She also has a tortoise and a bearded dragon.
     
    "I'm missing him and worried, the weather's not been great. I live at edge of town, there's coyotes and a lot of construction, lots of dangers out there."
     
    Holm says iguanas aren't that fragile, but they won't eat if they are cold.
     
    "They need to be warm to eat. He'll definitely be getting skinnier."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Female Journalist's Response To Online Harassment Met With Male Support

    Female Journalist's Response To Online Harassment Met With Male Support
    A reporter in Newfoundland and Labrador says the commentary piece she wrote about the harassment female journalists face earned some hate mail, but even more online support — particularly from men.

    Female Journalist's Response To Online Harassment Met With Male Support

    Royal Bank 'Closely Monitoring' Housing Markets In Vancouver, Toronto: CEO

    Royal Bank 'Closely Monitoring' Housing Markets In Vancouver, Toronto: CEO
    TORONTO — Royal Bank CEO David McKay says the lender is "closely monitoring" the real estate markets in Vancouver and Toronto, where home prices have been climbing at a breakneck pace.

    Royal Bank 'Closely Monitoring' Housing Markets In Vancouver, Toronto: CEO

    Health Staff Aware Inmate Who Died Of Overdose 'Intoxicated', Took Pills: Report

    Health Staff Aware Inmate Who Died Of Overdose 'Intoxicated', Took Pills: Report
    A police report says a man who died from a drug overdose in a Cape Breton jail told a prison nurse he had taken five "nerve pill(s)" and appeared intoxicated, raising questions for an addictions expert about why he wasn't sent to hospital rather than a prison cell.

    Health Staff Aware Inmate Who Died Of Overdose 'Intoxicated', Took Pills: Report

    Justin Trudeau Urged To Outline Directives, Actions On Ministerial Spending

    Justin Trudeau Urged To Outline Directives, Actions On Ministerial Spending
    The ethics commissioner is looking into Health Minister Jane Philpott's repeated use of a high-end car service owned by a Liberal supporter who canvassed for her during the last federal election.

    Justin Trudeau Urged To Outline Directives, Actions On Ministerial Spending

    Doctors 'Waking Up' To Opioid Over-prescription Problem In Canada: CMPA

    Doctors 'Waking Up' To Opioid Over-prescription Problem In Canada: CMPA
    VANCOUVER — The medical profession is waking up to the reality that opioids have been over-prescribed in Canada and is actively searching for solutions, says a national association that represents doctors in legal matters.

    Doctors 'Waking Up' To Opioid Over-prescription Problem In Canada: CMPA

    Innovation, Not Just Money, Needed To Fix Health-care System: Jane Philpott

    Innovation, Not Just Money, Needed To Fix Health-care System: Jane Philpott
    It's a myth that Canada has the best health-care system in the world, she told the annual meeting of the Canadian Medical Association on Tuesday.

    Innovation, Not Just Money, Needed To Fix Health-care System: Jane Philpott