December
20, 2009
The thought of owning a ferret never appealed to me.
These varmints -- so quick, slinky and well ... ferrety -- strike
me as a cross between a weasel, a rat and a snake. And aren't their
owners usually street kids or bikers?
Sooke writer/artist Kate Woods is on a different page. She's a diehard
ferret lover who has owned nine in her lifetime. Now, North Saanich's
Hedgerow Press has published her Ferrets Underfoot. The 206-page non-fiction
book chronicles Woods' often amusing (and occasionally revolting) ferret
adventures.
The book is somewhat in the tradition of Lyn Hancock, the Aussie writer
who made a literary career out of animal hijinks with There's a Seal
in My Sleeping Bag, There's a Raccoon in My Parka, and There's a Lemur
in My Lingerie (OK, I made that last one up). Much of the nicely written
Ferrets Underfoot revolves around the exploits of Woods' ferrets Teasel
and Cicely.
Ferrets typically live eight years on average, so she's now acquired
a fresh pair: Nemo and Dorrie. Apparently, the previous owners were
Finding Nemo fans. The animals cavort merrily in Woods' ferret-proofed
abode: a rustic 1941 cabin surrounded by salmonberry bushes and forest
near Otter Point.
So what exactly is the ineffable appeal of ferrets? Woods pointed
to their curiosity and irrepressible joie de vivre. Often these critters
will scamper away in fright, then turn around mid-flight to investigate
what scared them. Plus they're cute, although I suspect one person's
cuteness is another person's rattiness. After all, being described
as a "ferret-face" is rarely considered a feather in one's cap. Unless
one is a ferret.
I'd be happy to visit a ferret at a zoo. That said, many of Woods'
cautionary tales from Ferrets Underfoot have put me off these creatures
for life.
She writes, for example, about her cottage acquiring a certain "pungency." Turns
out her ferrets had burrowed into her couch and used it as a latrine.
Writes Woods: "The underside sagged not from the weight of ferrets
as I'd thought, but from several weeks' accumulation of droppings." Yuck.
There are other disturbing details. Teasel, apparently like most ferrets,
would eat the most peculiar things: socks, erasers, eyedroppers, Styrofoam,
phone buttons, elastic bands. This diet resulted in "wildly coloured
confetti droppings."
One time poor Teasel, suffering a blockage, was fed banana-flavoured
laxatives before ultimately undergoing surgery. The post-operative
ferret was restless and expelled blood, eventually daubing an entire
bathroom. (Woods slept there with Teasel that memorable night.)
The fun continues to this day. Woods tells me her current ferret,
Dorrie, recently gobbled an unpopped kernel of popcorn. The kernel
swelled up inside the animal, causing terrible discomfort (and necessitating
costly X-rays) before the offending food particle "burst out."
The stories in Ferrets Underfoot feature ferrets chomping tampons,
licking slugs, vomiting pilfered raisins, falling into zombie-like
sleeps and emitting peculiar odours. Woods writes: "He [ferret Tiki]
would occasionally stink in a manner that pungently betrayed ferrets'
kinship with skunks."
At one point, Woods became so concerned by Teasel's ongoing bladder
problems, she contacted a Vancouver Island pet psychic. (Yes, really.)
The psychic, equipped with only the animal's name, suggested Teasel
was eating too much protein, too much acid and too little calcium.
Weirdly, this advice seemed to help.
Woods first became enamoured with ferrets after spying one in a Fairfield
laundromat. And she saw another at the supermarket adorably gnawing
the plastic wrapper on a side of roast beef. Who could resist?
Woods also has a reputation as a soapstone sculptor. Several of her
artworks are at Sooke Harbour House. Before that Woods was a full-time
wood carver and turner. Her projects included helping restore a missing
altar at St. Ann's Academy and carving ornamentation for vintage desks
at the legislative buildings.
Ferrets Underfoot may be the very thing for that oh-so-special ferret
lover in your life. In Victoria, it's available at Munro's Books, Bolen
Books and Chapters.
"Certainly, out in Sooke," Woods said, "the reaction has been very
positive."