LOL. I love these two. I really do. We originally had them as fosters until they found a new home. However I think it was just in the stars that things worked out they way they did.
We got Mr. Skittles and Bella a month after Susie passed. We figured we still had loads of love even though our hearts still hurt. We also figured that Roscoe and Donnie needed some entertainment. So we go over to the shelter and we pick them up and take them home. The whole time I am dreading this because I know how ferret math works and we are going to end up keeping them. So time passes and they are mixed in amongst our kids and they are starting to bond. I am starting to freak out. The shelter still hasn't put the kids up on pet finder or their website and its been three months now. We are taking them to ferret adoption days and nothing not a bite. I mean Hell They are CUTE!!! I would take them home. As a matter of fact I did!
So finally come the end of Sept of last year they get posted on pet finder and the website. This is where I finally break down and tell my husband we are keeping them. LOL. I knew it was coming. I just didn't want it to happen. Rule number one in the ferret owner manual....Your gunna have more then one. How can you not. They are the cutest things that walk the earth.
So here we are proud ferrents to four ferrets!! (say that six times really fast). Now individually they are two totally different personalities. Bella started out being the demon child from the deepest depths of hell. My husband was traveling alot last year and every time he left I would cringe and wait.....BAM! She would destroy something. Poop on the bed, toss the room. OH yeah. she was a nasty piece of work. Her daddy left and damn it she wanted him back. She didn't want to deal with icky mommy. I was just so upset one day that I had to put her in time out. In the cage she went. Meanwhile Mr. Skittles was devastated by this. He wanted to break her out of jail. He enlisted the help of our local jail breaker Roscoe. To no avail. 15 minutes later I took her out. I needed a cool off period and I think then she learned her lesson. She has ever since been the picture of perfection. She will just look at us and collapse in a puddle of lovable goo. We have to hand feed her treats even though she is capable of getting her own. And my husband must have the cleanest face because he is forever getting groomed by her.
Now Mr. Skittles. He has always been my good lil boy. He is our oldest to date. I would say he is five years old. I never wanted a white ferret. Everybody loves white ferrets and only wants white ferrets. But we brought him home and he melted our hearts (but really just mine). I think of him as our big dumb jock. He is all brawn. He also does the silliest stuff. He is my model. If I want a picture of my ferrets I can guarantee I will get a good one with him. He just loves to be loved! He is also the pickiest of eaters. Only the best for him. His treat has been renamed to ferret crack, liquid gold.. good ole Feretone! Gotta love it.
Mr. Skittles is below
Bella:
And my personal fav of them together:
Enjoy!!
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Monday, December 12, 2011
Roscoe (The Alpha)
Roscoe is my Boss for the Ferret Mafia. He rules our domain. He is the shot caller. And he makes sure everyone knows including my husband and I. We got Roscoe when we found out how sick Susie was. We wanted to make sure Donnie had a buddy if anythinghappened. We got him thankfully a few months before she passed so he could get accustomed to all the ins and outs of his new family. Right away he thought he would rule the roost, but Susie had her ways. She was a sneaky girl. She would get back at himon her good days and just ignore him like she was a princess on her bad days.
I will never forget the day Susie passed. I had stayed home with her to help her to the potty and feed and hydrate her. When it came time we brought the boys in to say goodbye. Both Donnie and Roscoe climbed up and laid with her. (Definitely not normalas those two are insanely hyper when first let out.) And this was with a boy who didn't bond with any other ferrets in the shelter. We really were surprised and saddened by this. After he firmly took on the reigns of Alpha Ferret. It was a good thing. He would push Donnie into playing and would pester him and us for attention. I think this was his own way of coping with the loss. It didn't take long for him to take over the Princess Perch where Susie used to lay and watch the boys play. He now had a birdseye look on all that was happening.
When we first got him I think he was traumatized by the events in his life that he would act out in anger. It was sad. He would just bite unprovoked anything that was within reach of his fangs. When he was originally found he was left in a dumpsterwith a few other ferrets in a cage. After that he was sent to my favorite shelter and was a fixture there for sometime. I think the abuse he suffered really effected him. He wouldn't bond with other ferrets at the shelter. When we got him home I have toadmit. I had to talk myself into keeping him because I didn't think we could fix/help him. It took awhile but we finally found his kryptonite. TREATS! We stumbled upon a soft and moist food that would do the trick. He swears they are treats and we treatthem as such. We slowly started to get him to understand that with a sweet kiss you get a treat. The biting is in the past! They only time he acts out now is when he is playing.
It is funny seeing how he behaves when we introduce a new member of our growing mafia. He will torture them in a way only a ferret can appreciate. He will grab them by the ear and drag them around the room and after he gets caught doing this a few timesit stops, (He has learned that the treats disappear when he does naughty's.) But he gets the point across. "You are not the alpha nor will you be."
I know I shouldn't pick favorites amongst my children but I have to say. He is the one with the most personality. He adds the spice to life my ferrets need. If you ever need a good laugh you are guaranteed to get one from him. It is amazing what hecan get into and so quickly. We recently took him back for a visit to the shelter we got him from. Diane noticed he had changed and became such a happy boy. She also noticed everything he would get into. THAT'S MY BOY!
I will never forget the day Susie passed. I had stayed home with her to help her to the potty and feed and hydrate her. When it came time we brought the boys in to say goodbye. Both Donnie and Roscoe climbed up and laid with her. (Definitely not normalas those two are insanely hyper when first let out.) And this was with a boy who didn't bond with any other ferrets in the shelter. We really were surprised and saddened by this. After he firmly took on the reigns of Alpha Ferret. It was a good thing. He would push Donnie into playing and would pester him and us for attention. I think this was his own way of coping with the loss. It didn't take long for him to take over the Princess Perch where Susie used to lay and watch the boys play. He now had a birdseye look on all that was happening.
When we first got him I think he was traumatized by the events in his life that he would act out in anger. It was sad. He would just bite unprovoked anything that was within reach of his fangs. When he was originally found he was left in a dumpsterwith a few other ferrets in a cage. After that he was sent to my favorite shelter and was a fixture there for sometime. I think the abuse he suffered really effected him. He wouldn't bond with other ferrets at the shelter. When we got him home I have toadmit. I had to talk myself into keeping him because I didn't think we could fix/help him. It took awhile but we finally found his kryptonite. TREATS! We stumbled upon a soft and moist food that would do the trick. He swears they are treats and we treatthem as such. We slowly started to get him to understand that with a sweet kiss you get a treat. The biting is in the past! They only time he acts out now is when he is playing.
It is funny seeing how he behaves when we introduce a new member of our growing mafia. He will torture them in a way only a ferret can appreciate. He will grab them by the ear and drag them around the room and after he gets caught doing this a few timesit stops, (He has learned that the treats disappear when he does naughty's.) But he gets the point across. "You are not the alpha nor will you be."
I know I shouldn't pick favorites amongst my children but I have to say. He is the one with the most personality. He adds the spice to life my ferrets need. If you ever need a good laugh you are guaranteed to get one from him. It is amazing what hecan get into and so quickly. We recently took him back for a visit to the shelter we got him from. Diane noticed he had changed and became such a happy boy. She also noticed everything he would get into. THAT'S MY BOY!
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
The Don
Donnie went through a terrible loss when his sister Susie passed. I dedicated much of my time during those black moments to this poor boy that was heart sick over his sissy. A few months before Susie passed we rescued another ferret named Roscoe so we could get him intergrated in the group so Donnie wouldnt be left completely alone and heart broken. But even with his best pal to suport him it was a hard transition for him. I would come home nightly and cuddle with him in a bag Susie used to love to sleep in. I didnt have the heart to erase her "essesnse" from the house after she left so the bag stayed as a painful reminder. And every night poor Donnie would retire to the bag and let me rock him. It was hard to see. I feared that I would lose him also after the recent loss of Susie. After a few hard weeks he finally started to play more, eat more and in general just be a ferret more.
Donnie has always had a special place in my heart. He looks alot like my Simon. Only Donnie is chunky looking and just a fuzz ball. I will never understand why someone left him in that appartment. I am thankful every day to MAFF. Someone found him and heard of MAFF and a few months later he found us. ( I am one of the ferrents out there that believe I didnt find my ferrets...they found me.) It was destiny.
Donnie is the handsome gentle boy. You fall in love with him as soon as you see him. He loves his momma so much that he often walks so close to me I almost step on him all the time. You dont see him play with toys much but when he does its usually to show mom or dad that he is happy. As soon as you start to play with him he stops (unless its ferret in a bag or chase)
Donnie has a lot of stories to tell and lots of time to tell them but these first few posts where about my fuzzbutts past and present. I want to share the easy going nature of all my babies with everyone
Donnie now four other brothers and sisters. A group of ferrets is called a business, I like to call mine a "Mafia". You will see why as I continue with my ferrets tales!
Above are pictures of my Donnie. The one on top is the picture of the post from MAFF for Donnie and Susie. The one below was of him trying to sleep in a very small shoe box that my flip flops came in.
Donnie has always had a special place in my heart. He looks alot like my Simon. Only Donnie is chunky looking and just a fuzz ball. I will never understand why someone left him in that appartment. I am thankful every day to MAFF. Someone found him and heard of MAFF and a few months later he found us. ( I am one of the ferrents out there that believe I didnt find my ferrets...they found me.) It was destiny.
Donnie is the handsome gentle boy. You fall in love with him as soon as you see him. He loves his momma so much that he often walks so close to me I almost step on him all the time. You dont see him play with toys much but when he does its usually to show mom or dad that he is happy. As soon as you start to play with him he stops (unless its ferret in a bag or chase)
Donnie has a lot of stories to tell and lots of time to tell them but these first few posts where about my fuzzbutts past and present. I want to share the easy going nature of all my babies with everyone
Donnie now four other brothers and sisters. A group of ferrets is called a business, I like to call mine a "Mafia". You will see why as I continue with my ferrets tales!
Above are pictures of my Donnie. The one on top is the picture of the post from MAFF for Donnie and Susie. The one below was of him trying to sleep in a very small shoe box that my flip flops came in.
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Susie
After my husband and I got married and bought our house, there had been many a conversation with the topic of pets and what kind of pet should we get. My only stipulation was we get an animal that is in need of a home. No pet stores, no breeders and no friends that have the perfect puppy or kitten. I wanted an animal that was abused or abandoned, I wanted to take in something that needed us. Bless my husbands heart (and another reason I love him), he heartily agreed that with as many animals that fill the shelters we will do our best and be the best forever home we could be to whatever animal we chose to be ours.
After bouncing ideas off each other, and the countless times we changed our minds. Trying to do our best to find some precious bundle that would fit with our life style and work hours. We finally decided that a fuzzy was what we needed to bring into our family unit. After reading what I just wrote it makes it sound like our decision was made in a few days. This actually took months and still more months to find the fuzzy we thought would be a good "starter pet". Bob trolled the websites and landed on a few organizations in our area that had a few good candidates but when he saw the picture of Susie, that was it. Love at first sight. And Donnie was her brother and was a package deal. He didn't care he had to have her. The Picture was truly unique. She looked like trouble all over. We made an appointment to meet the ferrets and the shelter parents.
I know I said this before but it will be said many times. I don’t know what goes through peoples minds when they throw away an animal. They made the decision to have a pet. Own up to your responsibility and at least find another safe place if you no longer can care for them. That being said. Donnie and Susie were found alone in an empty apartment. It appears someone was in a hurry to go and "forgot" the two bundles of pure joy sitting in the living room.
I am happy to say that they found their way to a shelter and then to us. They were the start of our "ferret math". Susie brought us to tears with her antics and Donnie acted like he was above all that. They were the odd couple of siblings. However with joy comes the inevitable pain. About a month after bringing home our fuzzies we had to make the decision that would shape us as a family. Do we keep Susie and Donnie or do we give them up? We of course kept the kids and spent thousands that we will never regret. Susie was diagnosed with a bunch of "baddies" as the vet had said. She had insulinoma and adrenal cancer. With those she had other issues like the constant infections the ups and downs with her blood sugar the arthritis since she was getting old. It was heart breaking to see her fight the good fight. And equally heartbreaking to see the pain in my husbands eyes every time she got sick or was just not up to playing with his feet. Donnie knew his sissy wasn’t feeling good and didn’t like to leave her side, and would try to get her to play but just couldn’t get her to muster the strength in the end.
The day she went over the bridge was the hardest day for me. I had to be strong for my husband and for the brother she left behind. Donnie got depressed and wouldn’t leave her favorite bag. He would just lay there. I thought I would lose my boy because he was heartbroken with his loss. I cried in private because I was trying so hard to stay strong. I knew Donnie could sense our pain and I didn’t want to burden him with more stress. I had no clue how to comfort my husband. I had been through this before and knew it was new for him. But what do you say to a person grieving? I’m sorry just doesn’t seem right.
To this day over a year after our loss we still talk of Susie fondly. We miss her sorely and wish she could share in the fun of her extended family. I look forward to seeing her and Simon again when my time comes. Until then I know they are thinking of the tortures they will do to my feet. And like my beloved Simon, Susie was only with us for 6 month before we had to help her across the bridge. Its amazing how strong a bond can get in a short amount of time together and how much the loss hurts.
I will have more on Donnie later. As he still has his tales to tell.
Susie pictured above.
After bouncing ideas off each other, and the countless times we changed our minds. Trying to do our best to find some precious bundle that would fit with our life style and work hours. We finally decided that a fuzzy was what we needed to bring into our family unit. After reading what I just wrote it makes it sound like our decision was made in a few days. This actually took months and still more months to find the fuzzy we thought would be a good "starter pet". Bob trolled the websites and landed on a few organizations in our area that had a few good candidates but when he saw the picture of Susie, that was it. Love at first sight. And Donnie was her brother and was a package deal. He didn't care he had to have her. The Picture was truly unique. She looked like trouble all over. We made an appointment to meet the ferrets and the shelter parents.
I know I said this before but it will be said many times. I don’t know what goes through peoples minds when they throw away an animal. They made the decision to have a pet. Own up to your responsibility and at least find another safe place if you no longer can care for them. That being said. Donnie and Susie were found alone in an empty apartment. It appears someone was in a hurry to go and "forgot" the two bundles of pure joy sitting in the living room.
I am happy to say that they found their way to a shelter and then to us. They were the start of our "ferret math". Susie brought us to tears with her antics and Donnie acted like he was above all that. They were the odd couple of siblings. However with joy comes the inevitable pain. About a month after bringing home our fuzzies we had to make the decision that would shape us as a family. Do we keep Susie and Donnie or do we give them up? We of course kept the kids and spent thousands that we will never regret. Susie was diagnosed with a bunch of "baddies" as the vet had said. She had insulinoma and adrenal cancer. With those she had other issues like the constant infections the ups and downs with her blood sugar the arthritis since she was getting old. It was heart breaking to see her fight the good fight. And equally heartbreaking to see the pain in my husbands eyes every time she got sick or was just not up to playing with his feet. Donnie knew his sissy wasn’t feeling good and didn’t like to leave her side, and would try to get her to play but just couldn’t get her to muster the strength in the end.
The day she went over the bridge was the hardest day for me. I had to be strong for my husband and for the brother she left behind. Donnie got depressed and wouldn’t leave her favorite bag. He would just lay there. I thought I would lose my boy because he was heartbroken with his loss. I cried in private because I was trying so hard to stay strong. I knew Donnie could sense our pain and I didn’t want to burden him with more stress. I had no clue how to comfort my husband. I had been through this before and knew it was new for him. But what do you say to a person grieving? I’m sorry just doesn’t seem right.
To this day over a year after our loss we still talk of Susie fondly. We miss her sorely and wish she could share in the fun of her extended family. I look forward to seeing her and Simon again when my time comes. Until then I know they are thinking of the tortures they will do to my feet. And like my beloved Simon, Susie was only with us for 6 month before we had to help her across the bridge. Its amazing how strong a bond can get in a short amount of time together and how much the loss hurts.
I will have more on Donnie later. As he still has his tales to tell.
Susie pictured above.
Monday, September 26, 2011
In the beginning!
I would love everyone to get to know my ferrets and all the other ferrets out there. There are so many in need of a loving home but are neglected and tossed onto the street like yesterdays trash. I am one of the many people that takes a stand in a more positive direction and takes them into my home. I unknowingly started doing this years ago. When I took in a ferret that was sick from a girl who didn't want him. At the time I am positive she knew what was wrong with the poor thing and figured she had a likely idiot just willing to take on a daunting task of Ferret nursing.
That was the day I took in Simon. I kindly changed his name as I thought it was a huge injustice for a ferret to be called Sylvester (I mean he is not a cat or anything.) I was told she couldn't keep him because her other ferrets didn't like him and would pee on him. Well I thought that was the saddest thing I think I had ever heard. So I brought him home. I tried to be a responsible ferret owner I read as much as I could on the web. I got Ferrets for Dummies (btw, best book for rookies out there). So I think it was about two weeks later I corner this "friend" and ask when he needed to go to the vet. I was told that he had all his shots when he was born and thats all that he needed. Well I had owned pets my whole life just nothing this exotic so I figured something was deffinetly off on that comment. But I let it go seeing that he didnt present with any obvious illnesses.
It wasnt long after that I had noticed that he was starting to bald on the top of his head like a reverse monk and losing fur on his tail. Not only that but his belly started to "puff up" I finally take him to the vet and am told he has adrenial cancer and insulinoma and a form of skin cancer. This poor boy was at deaths door because I wasnt treating him properly due to ignorance on my "friends" part and on mine.
Now all of the above are all treatable illnesses. They take lots of money in vet bills and meds. And lots of love and patience and massive understanding on ferret healthcare. But being new to all this and not wanting to toss this poor baby out I did everything a person making $6 an hour could do. I spent thousands on him and dont regret a moment or a penny. This story comes to a sad end less then 6 months later when I am finally forced to do the right thing and help him on his way accross the bridge. I am now 12 years wiser and richer for that expierence.
I am a member of a foundation that stives to get information out to the public so that all the Simons out there will find love and peace in a forever home. Its is unbelievable how many people think that a ferret is a disposable pet. How many people will toss $150 out the window a few weeks after they bought one. I have four of my own that I have adopted and one that is a permenent foster. All with sad tales to tell and all the light of my life. If it were not for them my husband and I would go through the hum drum of life without the pure joy a ferret can give. This is my blog to enrich others as they have enriched me.
That was the day I took in Simon. I kindly changed his name as I thought it was a huge injustice for a ferret to be called Sylvester (I mean he is not a cat or anything.) I was told she couldn't keep him because her other ferrets didn't like him and would pee on him. Well I thought that was the saddest thing I think I had ever heard. So I brought him home. I tried to be a responsible ferret owner I read as much as I could on the web. I got Ferrets for Dummies (btw, best book for rookies out there). So I think it was about two weeks later I corner this "friend" and ask when he needed to go to the vet. I was told that he had all his shots when he was born and thats all that he needed. Well I had owned pets my whole life just nothing this exotic so I figured something was deffinetly off on that comment. But I let it go seeing that he didnt present with any obvious illnesses.
It wasnt long after that I had noticed that he was starting to bald on the top of his head like a reverse monk and losing fur on his tail. Not only that but his belly started to "puff up" I finally take him to the vet and am told he has adrenial cancer and insulinoma and a form of skin cancer. This poor boy was at deaths door because I wasnt treating him properly due to ignorance on my "friends" part and on mine.
Now all of the above are all treatable illnesses. They take lots of money in vet bills and meds. And lots of love and patience and massive understanding on ferret healthcare. But being new to all this and not wanting to toss this poor baby out I did everything a person making $6 an hour could do. I spent thousands on him and dont regret a moment or a penny. This story comes to a sad end less then 6 months later when I am finally forced to do the right thing and help him on his way accross the bridge. I am now 12 years wiser and richer for that expierence.
I am a member of a foundation that stives to get information out to the public so that all the Simons out there will find love and peace in a forever home. Its is unbelievable how many people think that a ferret is a disposable pet. How many people will toss $150 out the window a few weeks after they bought one. I have four of my own that I have adopted and one that is a permenent foster. All with sad tales to tell and all the light of my life. If it were not for them my husband and I would go through the hum drum of life without the pure joy a ferret can give. This is my blog to enrich others as they have enriched me.
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