Sugar Glider

Marshmallow and Gaston
Marshmallow and Gaston
Marshmallow and Gaston
Sugar gliders are nocturnal animals, so every morning when I'm eating my breakfast before leaving for work I get a little entertainment from our sugar gliders and the cat. Marshmallow used to bother me while I was eating my breakfast for our alone time. Now, she has something more fun to do.
Better make that two
Better make that two
Better make that two
Meet the newest member of my family: His name is Gaston and he is a sugar glider. My daughter Shaylee, 11, purchased a sugar glider during the Central Washington State Fair, not knowing that sugar gliders live in colonies. They will more than likely die of loneliness if there is only one of them...
Hello, Hazel Nut!
Hello, Hazel Nut!
Hello, Hazel Nut!
We have a new family member ... she's furry, small and likes to eat fruit. Say hello to Hazel Nut, the sugar glider. Last year my little Shaylee came across the sugar glider booth in the SunDome during the Central Washington State Fair. She begged her dad and I to buy her one, but we already have four indoor cats and I wasn't about to drop money on a small furry critter that would become a gourmet
That's just ... super
That's just ... super
That's just ... super
Take a guess at what my little 10-year-old Shaylee has been saving up her money for. No ... not the hottest toy. Nope ... not a cellphone. No ... not an iPad. She's been saving up to buy a "sugar glider." What's a sugar glider? Good question, because I had no clue what the heck they are, either!