March 22, 2009
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If allowed, Nikolai can trash a cabinet in seconds. |
Susan NC Price,
Chicago
Pets Examiner
Examiner.com
I came to ferret-keeping late in life. Until my mid—or even
late—30s, I’d never actually seen or held one. They weren’t
common pets around Rochester, NY, where I grew up.
Truth be told, they still aren’t particularly common.
In fact, a handful of states actually outlaw them as pets. They do
not show affection in the same way dogs or even cats do. But they have
a perky charm all their own.
Some call ferrets perpetual kittens. Their energy and playfulness
certainly support this assertion. Your average ferret enjoys nothing
more than a new fluffy or jingly thing to attack, a new furnishing
to climb or a box or tube to crawl into and investigate. If you haven’t
seen video of the ferret war dance, searching on that phrase will come
up with dozens of examples.
The first ferrets I saw had medium-dark coloration— dark enough
to show the bandit-like maks on their faces. Their apparent bonelessness
as they draped or climbed over my arms and shoulders fascinated me.
But I think I truly became a ferret convert the first time the I saw
the humped-back, I-will-attack dance of a playful ferret.
The ferret currently in my care (technically belonging to my younger
son Charlie) lives a dull life most of the time as he is an only ferret
at the moment. But every day he gets out once or twice to bounce around
the bathroom, a ferret-safe (well, relatively safe) spare bedroom,
or even the front garden—all under very close supervision.
I’ve heard that some ferret owners have completely ferret-proofed rooms, where their little domestic weasels can romp at liberty for
hours on end. I am unwilling to give over a whole room for rooms, where their little domestic weasels can romp at liberty for
hours on end. I am unwilling to give over a whole room for a single
ferret, so Nikolai spends most of his days in a 3-shelf, 2 x 3 x 4-foot-tall
cage with double-level hammock. But, since ferrets can sleep upwards
of 20 hours a day, I’m not worried that he feels dreadfully constrained.
We both enjoy his forays into the larger world immensely, though.
Sometimes he’s attacking a ferret toy in the bathtub (he gets
his high-jump exercise leaping in and out). Other days see him scurrying
under bed and behind desk … or sniffing at interesting vermin
smells in the front garden.
Truth to tell, Nikolai didn’t enjoy being outside at all when
I first took him out. But since he wore a little ferret harness and
I held the leash, he had no say in the matter. He still doesn’t
like being out on short grass, but he has learned to quite enjoy “hunting” thedeep
jungle that is my front garden.
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