bbelflower
In the Brooder
I'm always being photo bombed by this HOUND!!
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I'm always being photo bombed by this HOUND!!
You just try and get my eggs buddy boy---you will pull back a nub!
Oh lord it's hard to be humble , when you're perfect in every way!! I can't wait to look in the mirror, I get better lookin' each day!!
Having learned Mr. TomCat kills snakes, Mrs. Henny thinks nothing of giving the flock protector a massage.
Hmmmmm.....this little hole would be perfect to store acorns in.
!!! You have a baby squirrel? How cute! How did you get it?!
Peanut is a red squirrel that was found as a baby pushed from the nest-most likely by the mother. He was fed by syringe until weaning and then passed on and on to different people until one of my students got ahold of him. My student asked me to take him. All of this happening in the space of three months. Peanut is special needs. His front and lower teeth do not line up and as a result the teeth do not wear down. Left on his own, the squirrel would die within a month (In the wild, mother animals often reject babies with deformities.). Rodent teeth grow constantly as long as the animal is alive and when the teeth do not line up the teeth grow up through the brain case and down through the jaw and throat. In the wild he would have died either of starvation or the teeth would have pierced a vital area. Peanut was passed on and on until he got to us because of the difficulty in maintaining his teeth. My wife trims Peanut's teeth every two weeks;!!! You have a baby squirrel? How cute! How did you get it?!![]()
OMGosh! how sweet is that and how noble & kind you are to take him in and help him! Bless you!! & your wife!!Peanut is a red squirrel that was found as a baby pushed from the nest-most likely by the mother. He was fed by syringe until weaning and then passed on and on to different people until one of my students got ahold of him. My student asked me to take him. All of this happening in the space of three months. Peanut is special needs. His front and lower teeth do not line up and as a result the teeth do not wear down. Left on his own, the squirrel would die within a month (In the wild, mother animals often reject babies with deformities.). Rodent teeth grow constantly as long as the animal is alive and when the teeth do not line up the teeth grow up through the brain case and down through the jaw and throat. In the wild he would have died either of starvation or the teeth would have pierced a vital area. Peanut was passed on and on until he got to us because of the difficulty in maintaining his teeth. My wife trims Peanut's teeth every two weeks;
imagine reaching into a chipmunk's mouth as that is how big Peanut is.![]()