Gretel Posted April 1, 2012 Share Posted April 1, 2012 Eyeless! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PennyLane Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 We Used to have a cat named "Sillycat" and a dog name B.D. which stood for Big Dog LOL and a pig named Bonkers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
~Rumour~ Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 I once met a Dachshund named Chip, full name Chipolata :laugh: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mita Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 I read in the weekend newspaper that actor, Sam Worthington, called his Cavalier, 'Bacon'. I don't know if he plans to get a second Cav named 'Eggs'. :) He was quoted as saying he loves his dog, 'like a son'. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Shelby Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 We were at a show once & I yelled out to ex-hubbie "Can you get Rambo for me?" Imagine the surprise on a few faces when out comes a sheltie :laugh: Not sure what type of breed they were expecting. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
brintey Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 My Pyrenean Mountain Dog's name is Sasquatch (Sassy). If she had been a boy it was going to be Moth, short for Woolly Mammoth. My Leo's registered name is Fire Ant, and I've always thought the shaded sable Leonberger colouring looked a little char-grilled, so I called her Singe. I wanted a pretty feminine name for my blue greyhound so she is Amethyst. She gets Ammo for short - not very feminine so that one didn't work out as planned :) I have never called a pet with a person's name as my name is Sally and growing up I met quite a few cows named Sally! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OSoSwift Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 My pet Sheep are Groover and Sambuca. Groover actually started out as Hoover - go figure. The cow is Demi Moo Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
moosmum Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 At 55 kilos and 80 cms,Piddles. We have had Alias,a fox terrier. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
melinda10786 Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 A friend of mine named his female kitten "Meow".. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mita Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 We were at a show once & I yelled out to ex-hubbie "Can you get Rambo for me?" Imagine the surprise on a few faces when out comes a sheltie :laugh: Not sure what type of breed they were expecting. We adopted an ex-show dog whose pedigree name is Zena Warrior Princess. Call name, Zena. Something big that takes no prisoners? No, she's the gentlest natured little blonde tibbie, with a sweet face. So we put Nina in front of her name & she's become Nina Zena or NZ, for short (which makes people think she comes from New Zealand!) :) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aetherglow Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 (edited) My Dad's actually quite creative when it comes to naming pets. He'd love a dog, but living circumstances for a good number of years have meant cats only. In the past he's had Mojo MauMau Jumping Jack Flash and recently (which is not quite so creative) Miss Kitty and Mr Kat. Our current lot are: DOGS Pixie LuluBelle Smudge Tango Charlie Spud Moose Phoenix CATS Peanut Henry Willow Kitty Pickles MINI PIGGIES Poppy Porkchops Truffles The geese are collectively known as Tweedle Dumb and Tweedle Dumber (there are four of them and never in my life have I encountered such stoopid animals!) The chooks are collectively "The Cackleberry Quintet" and our rooster is Mr Frizzle. I also love the name Bruce for a dog or cat, but as my father-in-law's name is Bruce, it may not go down so well :laugh: I met a cat named Bruce today. He was a very handsome fellow. I had a friend at school who had a horse named Tristan. And I know someone who got a sheep for Christmas and called him Shank. When my Mum was a kid the family cat, a white female, was named Tiger, but her original name was GreasyPaw. Edited April 2, 2012 by LappieHappy Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cavigirl Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 My Dad was the cause of our pets odd names. Cats were fat man, jabby, grunt, boof head and piggy. Dogs were pretty conservative with saber (sheltie x border collie), major ( samoyed x) , Jess (border colllie) , and Sheba ( border collie). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Clover Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 Tinny & Elvis, and the newest Border Collie pup..... Dawes (who is a girl ). Dawes also gets Dawesey, Dawesey pawsey, Dawdles etc :laugh:. In the future i will have a Franklin, Flipper (would have suited Dawes) & Eccy. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Simply Grand Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 So many great names! I've been reading thinking mine all have pretty standard names then read about the dogs called Chops and realised that that's my oldest cat's name. I'm so used to it that it doesn't seem weird anymore, hehehe. She was called that coz when I first adopted her she would bite anyone that so much as walked past her. As kids we had cats with the super creative names Puss and Kitty. My guinea pig was Snuffy and my sister's was Harry. Turned out Harry was a girl, which we discovered when she got very fat then 4 new little guinea pigs arrived. We named them Leonardo, Donatello, Raphael and Michaelangelo after the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aetherglow Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 Ah yes, the problem of not knowing how to identify the sex of a rabbit led to my early childhood rabbit, Arthur, being renamed Martha after she got out one day and met up with the rabbit down the road, and kindled nine kits some weeks later. I suspect that was and still is a fairly common problem! Did Harry become Harriet? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alkhe Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 I just remembered my boyfriend's housemate - she has 5 chickens, all called Michael, all named after a different Michael.. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Simply Grand Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 Haha, Lappie, we were assured by the market pet shop that Harry was a girl, we had no idea. She did remain Harry after becoming a mum (we found homes for the babies) but little Snuffy got neutered. Mum tells me that he was the first guinea pig the vet had desexed and that he was apparently QUITE well endowed compared to most other animals ;) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chequeredblackdog Posted April 2, 2012 Author Share Posted April 2, 2012 When I was in year 6 , one of the girls in my class got a kitten. Her parents ordered it from a breeder in another state. They decided on a pretty little ginger female...... When she arrived off the plane, she was a HE!!! They rang the breeder who apologised and said that the two gingers in the litter looked the same...... she sent the wrong one! >.< The family had already gotten all the necessary kitten stuff (in pink and inscribed) and so Matilda he was and still is! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dame Aussie Posted April 2, 2012 Share Posted April 2, 2012 Ah yes, the problem of not knowing how to identify the sex of a rabbit led to my early childhood rabbit, Arthur, being renamed Martha after she got out one day and met up with the rabbit down the road, and kindled nine kits some weeks later. I suspect that was and still is a fairly common problem! Did Harry become Harriet? We bought a "female" rabbit which I named Sweet Pea, and a "Male" Guinea Pig which my brother named Coloured. Sweet Pea and Coloured were more than just friends IYKWIM and would hump on the odd occasion, and one day we woke up to find itsy bitsy baby Guinea Pigs in the hutch.....of course I thought that they had babies together (I was about 7) but then Mum informed me that Coloured, who was obviously a girl must have been pregnant in the pet shop :laugh: We called the babies Snowy (white) and Coloured No 2 (coloured) :laugh: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aetherglow Posted April 3, 2012 Share Posted April 3, 2012 (edited) Ah yes, the problem of not knowing how to identify the sex of a rabbit led to my early childhood rabbit, Arthur, being renamed Martha after she got out one day and met up with the rabbit down the road, and kindled nine kits some weeks later. I suspect that was and still is a fairly common problem! Did Harry become Harriet? We bought a "female" rabbit which I named Sweet Pea, and a "Male" Guinea Pig which my brother named Coloured. Sweet Pea and Coloured were more than just friends IYKWIM and would hump on the odd occasion, and one day we woke up to find itsy bitsy baby Guinea Pigs in the hutch.....of course I thought that they had babies together (I was about 7) but then Mum informed me that Coloured, who was obviously a girl must have been pregnant in the pet shop :laugh: We called the babies Snowy (white) and Coloured No 2 (coloured) :laugh: It's entirely possible that Sweet Pea was a girl. Rabbits use humping as a dominance tool just like dogs do but more so, and in rabbits the girls are often the bosses, and bigger and stronger than the males. They will also hump cats, chickens, corn-on-the-cob (hump one end while eating the other - efficiency!), legs and just about anything else. I used to keep rabbits, and Jane Doe, my alpha, was most definitely queen of the yard and made sure the boys knew it by humping them frequently, while she made Juliet the omega doe's life so miserable that I had to keep them seperated. Both boys were desexed in adulthood when I adopted them and both were completely mature and "male" in outlook, but Jane completely dominated. Oliver BunBuck, my second boy, was rehomed to me because he spent too much time humping his rescuer's chickens and the poor chickens were getting stressed. Non-desexed male rabbits and guinea pigs are usually VERY obvious when you look :laugh: Come to think of it, I did get some odd reactions from people when I told them that my original two rabbits were named Jane Doe and Buck Rogers. When I was building them an awesome new hutch I got a most disgusted reaction from the girl at the hardware store, who thought I was a psycho Edited April 3, 2012 by LappieHappy Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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