We rescued a RES (approx 2 years old) from a nasty local pet store. We've named her Matilda as she's smart and resourceful, and also been through a hell of a lot since birth.
We don't know much about her time before the pet store, other than she was purchased as a baby and then when she got too big, was brought to the pet store where we found her.
Here are some things worth noting. For 6 months:
- She wasn't given proper lighting (no heat lamp, and sharing a long UVB bulb with some crabs in the tank beside her);
- She had no water heater and water temp when we bought her was 71*F (4-5 degrees below minimum);
- Her filter (which was sold to us with her) wasn't working;
- Her basking site was disgusting and covered in algea;
- Her tank is too small for her, and it was painted with wall paint on the outside;
All these are things we're remedying or have already fixed (only thing we still need is a bigger tank, which will be coming in January.
Here are some things we've noticed that's unusual:
- Her shell is ok, no spots, but is slightly mis-shapen hear her hind legs
- She has eaten a little bit, a little food that got soggy when we first tried on Saturday (Day 1). We feed our turtles outside of their tanks to prevent fouling, and she hasn't transitioned into that yet. I haven't seen her eat at all, even when we try feed her in the tank. I'm very serious about routine with all my animals, and it's my attitude to have them adjust to us, not us adjust to them
A vet visit is in the cards, but unfortunately we don't have the money to do it for a few weeks. She's been through so much in the last couple days that I'm worried about permanent psychological trauma if we put her through a vet visit right now.
In the meantime, we have set up her enclosure properly, and our primary concern is eating.
Is it normal for an adult RES to not be eating? What is the hourly mark for concern (24 hours, 72 hours?)
The good news:
All of her vitals are ok - she's not showing any signs of illness (except not eating and withdrawn hunger response), she basks on a regular basis, she hasn't vomited or gaped, or shown any signs of respiratory infection.
We do really think we can pull her through to normalcy - just need to get her eating - any advice?

