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  1. #1
    Billy
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    Default Re: Step forward and be recognized

    Quote Originally Posted by Kurt View Post
    Very good. Good luck with your quest for large Bufonids, last time I saw a rococo for sale it was $200. We all know Colorado River toads are pricey as well. Marines? Well, they are cheap as heck.
    Check out Melanophryniscus stelzneri and Bufo variegatus, those are two of my favorite Bufonids.
    Actually, there's a shop here in TX, that sells Rococos for under $40.00 I wish I had got one of the B. alvarius on Kingsnake.com for $75.00. But I didn't have the money at the time. I love those little Bumblebee toads. Never heard of B. variegatus, have to look it up. But if it's a toad, it's gold.

  2. #2
    Kurt
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    Default Re: Step forward and be recognized

    Quote Originally Posted by Billy View Post
    Never heard of B. variegatus, have to look it up. But if it's a toad, it's gold.
    Yes, its gold, and red (brown) and black.


  3. #3
    Founder John's Avatar
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    Default Re: Step forward and be recognized

    Welcome everyone! I was out in Central Oklahoma last night. I saw my first live adult American Bullfrog (very impressive), bunch of Woodhouse's toad breeding and elsewhere a bunch of Great Plains Toads breeding. That's my news!

  4. #4
    Kurt
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    Default Re: Step forward and be recognized

    Quote Originally Posted by John View Post
    Welcome everyone! I was out in Central Oklahoma last night. I saw my first live adult American Bullfrog (very impressive), bunch of Woodhouse's toad breeding and elsewhere a bunch of Great Plains Toads breeding. That's my news!
    You have never seen a live bullfrog in the flesh before? You should come to my house! We usually have up three bullfrogs living in the swimming pool at a time. We keep chlorine levels very low. There's one in there right at this moment. I have gotten to the point where I barely even notice them anymore.
    Other frogs seen in the yard are eastern American toads, wood frogs, and the occasional gray treefrog or spring peeper.
    However, I have never seen a Great Plains toad in the flesh before, so kudos!

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