Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Entangled baby squirrels now free of each other

- Meg Jones

Some siblings are close, but then there are the five baby squirrels who bonded so well they were inseparabl­e. Literally.

When a pet carrier filled with squirrels was brought last Thursday to the Wisconsin Humane Society’s Wildlife Rehabilita­tion Center in Milwaukee, it looked like a seething, roiling, furry tempest.

Wildlife rehabilita­tors were surprised to see four squirrels with their tails hopelessly entwined. Donning leather gloves, they pulled out the agitated mob and realized there were actually five.

“Which tells you how jumbled they were,” Crystal Sharlow-Schaefer, the center’s wildlife supervisor, said Tuesday.

It was like a tug of war with each squirming squirrel trying to break free from their littermate­s. Which, of course, only tightened the knot.

“They were agitated. It was a very animated bundle of fur,” said Scott Diehl, the wildlife center’s director.

After checking their vital signs, the squirrel sibs were anesthetiz­ed. As they slumbered, Diehl began to unravel the mess, a task he compared to the mythic Gordian knot.

First, the critters were fanned out like spokes of a wheel. Then, using surgical scissors, Diehl began cutting away long grass and bits of plastic embedded in the tails that were likely parts of their nest. Gradually, strand by strand, tail by tail, the squirrels were separated from their kin.

Diehl was concerned about swelling in the tails from the traumatic experience. But aside from lesions and sores, which were cleaned and treated with antibiotic ointment, Diehl was able to save their tails.

Squirrels can survive without their tails but it’s not easy. Tails are used for balance when leaping across tree branches or power lines. In winter, tails are like a cozy scarf squirrels use to stay warm. They’re also used for communicat­ion — anyone who has seen a tickedoff squirrel knows how they flick their tails in anger or frustratio­n.

A woman noticed the squirrel pile near her Franklin apartment and asked a friend to help bring them to the Humane Society. It’s unknown how the tangled squirrels managed to get out of their nest, but perhaps one jumped and brought down the rest of the family.

Because they couldn’t eat or drink while connected, the kits were suffering from dehydratio­n. Had they not been found by the good Samaritan, it’s likely they would have died, Diehl said.

The Wisconsin Humane Society’s Wildlife Rehabilita­tion Center handles about 5,000 animals each year. Along with the knotted squirrels, the center is currently treating a great horned owl possibly suffering from West Nile virus, a coyote and three red foxes with mange, other orphaned squirrels, a Cooper’s hawk injured in a vehicle collision and a Canada goose shot by an arrow.

Squirrel moms give birth to two litters each year, in the spring and late summer, with an average litter size of four naked, blind kits. At four weeks, their eyes open and they have a velvetylik­e fur coat. The tail-tangled squirrel babies are likely 5 to 6 weeks old.

Since they were separated, the squirrel brothers and sisters have been recuperati­ng in a warm, quiet area, dining on squirrel formula, biscuits, apples, sweet corn, carrots, peanuts, sunflower seeds and acorns.

 ?? SOCIETY WISCONSIN HUMANE ?? Five baby squirrels were found in Franklin last week with their tails hopelessly entwined.
SOCIETY WISCONSIN HUMANE Five baby squirrels were found in Franklin last week with their tails hopelessly entwined.

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