Hahaha. I remember one time I found a Box turtle hiding behind a stove. Okay, so, personally, the best time would be winter. you find a river, and look for holes. they are hibernating, so less bite and less walk. make sure you shine a flashlight in there first, cause of OTHER hibernating animals. if you find one, reach you hand down in there and grab the first few inches of soil for it to rest on, and also to incubate any EGGS IT MIGHT HAVE!! just make sure that you grab from behind if possible, if not, grab a stick so it has something to bite while you grab it. they can take a finger off!
first you get a big butterfly net and chase the turtle. get close enough and slam the net over the turtle. then scoop him up and slowly release him into a big box!!
its gone to eat when it gets hungry but it can only eat under water
Box turtles have a high domed shell, which is hinged at the bottom, allowing the animal to close its shell tightly to escape predators.
not realy but hording wild box turtles it is a leagle
The Box turtle Family is Emydidae
Turtles in the wild are very intelligent, I believe that a box turtle has even been trained to sit, stay, and roll over.
There are many diseases that a wild pond turtle can catch in its lifetime. One of these diseases is known as ulcerative shell disease.
The snapping turtle will try to attack or kill the box turtle. Some times even eat the box turtle
I think the easiest wild animal to catch in a box would probably be a snake, bird, frogs, a mouse, or a a small rabbit.
A boy box turtle.
Chinese box turtle was created in 1863.
Your box turtle is hiding because it is scare of something