Archive for July, 2009

Here's a roundup of articles and videos I've found, which may be of interest.  Please note that I don't endorse any content - it's just here for your reading pleasure :)

Raw Food Diet For Ferret?

Very few ferrets live into their teens (especially in North America) and diet is only a portion of the overall health of a ferret. Breeding and environment play just as big a factor and though there was a time when ferrets averaged 9-11 ...

How to Care For a Ferret : Pet Ferret Health Care: Spay, Neuter, Dental

Muis really isn’t well these days …

She was fine last week but I couldn't get to see our vet on Wednesday as the vet was ill so had to reschedule my appointment to Saturday.  It didn't worry me because Muis wasn't showing any other signs of adrenal other than hair loss.

However ... on Thursday morning I picked her up and although her eyes were open, she was as floppy as a rag doll.  Another low blood sugar crash!  God!  I thought the medicine was supposed to stop that from happening!

Welcome :)

I hope all my friends who were interested in my Blogger blog will join me here on this new WordPress blog!

I really can't fault the email I received - if someone says my blog looks boring and tired, then it must be up to me to make the whole thing more interesting.  My only reason for doing this is to provide personal and informative stuff about ferrets to people.  

I want people to know that ferrets really make fabulous pets ... BUT .... they are not for everyone.  Just because they're small and can live in cages, it doesn't mean that's where they belong.

I’m feeling incredibly depressed :(

It looks like Muis now has adrenal problems on top of everything else!

I know that ferrets with insulinoma can get adrenal problems as well but I had been so optimistic about the Poly-MVA helping her, and she seems so bright and active, that I thought that I had everything under control for her.

Her coat was looking a bit scruffy a couple of weeks ago then towards the end of last week, I noticed that, just when the light hit her back at a certain angle, her fur looked very thin just between her shoulder blades and that's when all the warning bells went off. And now, just yesterday, I saw that the hair at the base of her tail is beginning to thin out.

Black-footed ferrets at boot camp

This article, in the Globe & Mail Science section, talks about how scientists have to teach the black-footed ferrets they've bred to "be wild".

Apparently, back in 1991, they just released the black-footed ferrets straight from their cages, where they were bred, onto the prairies and ... guess what ... nearly all of them died, having been taken by coyotes and badgers. Those little fellahs had no idea how to escape their predators.
So now they've worked out that they need to TEACH black-footed ferrets how to survive in the wild, so they are taking them to boot camp to learn the things which their mother should have taught them.
Hmmm, let me think!
The Californian authorities state that if ferrets are allowed as pets in that state, they *might* escape and start colonies of feral ferrets (yes I know, most ferrets in the States are sterilised at a young age but that small point has obviously been overlooked by the CDFG) which will, in turn, cause havoc on the fragile Californian ecosystem.
And here we have scientists telling us that black-footed ferrets, which are bred in captivity, have no idea how to be wild and in order to survive, they have to be taught how to be wild.
Now - does anyone think that maybe, just maybe, the light of reason will come on in the brains of those particular civil servants and they might actually realise that they have been wrong in branding the DOMESTIC ferret a danger to the state?!
I would also like to put that point to the authorities in Queensland and the Northern Territory! It's even more ridiculous that ferrets are banned there because there is NO WAY an escaped ferret will survive in the humid, tropical conditions, nor would it probably survive the snakes, poisonous cane toads and crocodiles that inhabit the area.
Grumph!