Truro News

Just can’t wait

Starving groundhog found wandering around Bible Hill in the cold

- BY LYNN CURWIN lynn.curwin@trurodaily.com

A young groundhog apparently couldn’t wait for her big day and was spotted wandering in Bible Hill. Fortunatel­y, the person who found her knew exactly where to turn

Allister Mombourque­tte knew the little groundhog in his yard wouldn’t survive if he didn’t do something. The animal was out in the cold and snow on a day when other groundhogs were tucked up inside their dens.

“He didn’t look very good,” said Mombourque­tte, who lives on Brookside Road in Bible Hill. “There was no energy in him at all. He was lying down and his fur was stuck in the snow.

“I put a box down and pushed him in. He never tried to bite or anything. He was pitiful looking and I didn’t think he was going to make it.”

He first noticed the animal on his property about three days earlier, but he worried more as the weather got worse.

“I love animals and I don’t want to see them suffering,” he said.

Mombourque­tte had heard about the Cobequid Wildlife Rehabilita­tion Centre (CWRC) so he called. “I didn’t get an answer so I just put him in the car and took him out.”

When Dr. Helene Van Doninck, who runs the CWRC, saw the groundhog she knew there was a good chance it wouldn’t survive.

“She’s the skinniest one I’ve seen,” she said.

“She was probably one of the young from last year, who didn’t get fat enough for hibernatio­n, or was flooded out of her den.

“After she got here we were afraid she would seizure.”

The little animal had very little energy and was fed a critical-care solution for the first days. She also needed supplement­al heat. After a few days she was eating greens, apples, nuts and rodent chow.

“We could pick her up at first,” said Van Doninck. “Now she doesn’t want us to, which is a good sign. She’s also starting to show more interest in what’s going on around her.”

Van Doninck did hibernate a groundhog in her garage one year, but this one is too skinny to survive hibernatio­n.

If things go well, the little mammal, who has been named Ghog, will be released in a remote area in the spring.

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 ?? LYNN CURWIN/TRURO DAILY NEWS ?? Ghog was extremely thin when she was found, wandering in circles, in Stewiacke. She’s now recovering at the Cobequid Wildlife Rehabilita­tion Centre.
LYNN CURWIN/TRURO DAILY NEWS Ghog was extremely thin when she was found, wandering in circles, in Stewiacke. She’s now recovering at the Cobequid Wildlife Rehabilita­tion Centre.

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