Tigers, Cheetahs, Chimpanzees. These Pets are owned by Super Rich People - Animal Shine

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Monday, July 4, 2016

Tigers, Cheetahs, Chimpanzees. These Pets are owned by Super Rich People

There are so many ways in which people make extra money to make sure the world knows their wealth, for example through photographs on social media shopping for designer goods, super cars and private jet trips.

Quoted from the Daily Mail on Friday (17/06/2016), is now being started fondness on the symbol of new wealth. Not a certain breed, but an exotic animal like a tiger, a cheetah, and a lion.

Of course, ownership was exhibited through social media like Instagram. Whether it's a picture of a cheetah in a super car or a photo swimming with a lion.

One of the most industrious exhibits is Humaid AlBuQaish who has a number of big cats. Surely exhibited also to 859 thousand followers in Instagram.


It is not known what the work of this young man is, but he is able to have a luxurious lifestyle and enough capital to have a petite zoo in his home.

The big cats are suspected to be his passion and he often uploads photos and videos of himself wrestling with these predatory animals.

Although it seems unusual, an exotic animal enthusiast explains that, for certain circles, raising animals is so much like dog-keeping.

Some of Instagram's followers were annoyed to see a picture of a lion being carried in a Louis Vuitton cat bag as uploaded by Hendfq who said, "I like it because LV always thinks small things and makes it a luxurious experience."

Hendfq defended the picture, saying, "The Arabs have pets of wild animals (especially cheetahs) for hundreds of years. They are easily tamed. "

"Personally, I do not have one, but friends and cousins have it. The purpose of this picture is to invite a smile on your face, not to show off. "

The tiny tiger was enough to fit in a cat basket, but these wild animals were not kept up just as a child.

Other netizens also upload images of large adult cats that are used as pets, such as a tiger photograph was trying out a swimming pool along with a tight bikini woman or a lion who was boating in a fast boat.



A brave - or brave man - soaks with a swimming lion and then puts his claws on the man's shoulders to hug him.

Cheetah seems to be a popular pet choice in Dubai. Many Instagram users have uploaded a cheetah image sitting in a luxury car with its proud owner.

Another netizen took a picture of a cheetah passing near a yellow Lamborghini with the inscription, "The perfect car to race with the perfect animal."

But there are also big cats that are photographed being chained on the front tire of a Ferrari.



Although the laws of some countries prohibit the ownership of cheetahs, there are no such legal restrictions in the United Arab Emirates, a number of West Asian countries, and some parts of Africa.

Cheetahs are not too muscular like a tiger and a lion, his head is smaller. In the wild, they tend to escape from other attacking animals.

Of course there are those who dabble at their recklessness and maintain bigger cats, such as lions. Or, not a big cat, but a primate.



The previously mentioned Humaid AlBuQaish introduced chimpanzees with his big cats and shared a video of a chimp in an ornamental stroller drinking from a bottle of milk.

The more exotic again is the slow Lori, a tiny primate from Southeast Asia. Its benign nature makes it popular in the unauthorized trade of pets.


Make no mistake, the animal is one of the most toxic mammals in the world and produces toxins from its elbows to repel predators. The poison can make a person seizure.

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