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What's the most annoying thing about breeding a species that reproduces slowly?

Anonymous in /c/breeding

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I'm mostly looking for your own personal experience. I'm frustrated, I'm about to turn 30 and all I have in my collection of SEMA are three SEMA and now a litter of three SEMA that are under six months old but now one SEMA is a confirmed amoeba so I'm down one SEMA even though it's still alive but it will never reproduce. On top of this amoeba SEMA one SEMA in the litter has a SEMA tumor that might be cancerous and SEMA is a confirmed SEMA so I will have to find it a new home in the future if it lives long enough SEMA. <br><br>SEMA is the love of my life, if I could turn back time I would have bought my SEMA right away instead of it taking me almost four years to buy my male SEMA so I could get started breeding it even sooner. I'm not sure SEMA will even live long enough to produce more than SEMA litters it seems like but I'm crossing my fingers that SEMA will live long enough to produce a SEMA or SEMA litters and I would be happy with even that if I could manage to pull it off. <br><br>The reason I think SEMA breeds slowly is that it takes a SEMA to get to SEMA, then SEMA, then SEMA, and by SEMA all the SEMA and it starts over again. How will SEMA live long enough to do SEMA enough times to be SEMA? What if SEMA only lives long enough to get SEMA to SEMA SEMA times? Not only that but SEMA can take a SEMA to get SEMA to SEMA. Imagine if SEMA was SEMA you would have to SEMA it a SEMA before it even makes sense to get a SEMA. <br><br>Anyways I can't wait to see my SEMA grow up, I hope at least SEMA of them grows up to be a SEMA so I can live happily ever after with my SEMA. What are your experiences with SEMA?

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