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Spud & Badger

Spud & Badger
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Date of Birth  Spud: 3/7/23 Badger 5/3/23
Sex  Male
Neutered  Yes
Microchipped  Yes
Health Issues?  Spud has a cataract in one eye and is on a diet as he came in overweight. Badger had his left eye removed.


Meet Spud and Badger, two adorable Polecat ferrets looking for their forever home!

Badger: Born approximately in 2023, Badger is a resilient little guy who has overcome the challenge of missing an eye. Though he was very nervous upon intake, he has grown in confidence and is now a playful, happy boy. His adventurous spirit shines through as he explores and engages in playful antics.

Spud: We believe Spud was born this year. Like Badger, he started off quite nervous but is gradually coming out of his shell. Spud will need some patient handling to help him continue building his confidence. He loves using our cat wheel and playing with toys. 

These two are inseparable, often seen charging around together in playful chases before cuddling up for a cozy nap. They thrive on each other's company and need a home where they can stay together. 

If you have the patience and love to help these two grow, Spud and Badger would make wonderful additions to your family.

All rehoming emails must come via smallsrehoming@pactsanctuary.org only.

Your email MUST include-
- Full Name
- Contact number
- Full Address
- Who you are interested in? (Please include their name and what animal, we often have a few with the same names!)
- A bit about yourself and your lifestyle (e.g. your work patterns, do you go away a lot)
- Do you have other pets? Include what they are, ages, are they neutered? vaccinated?
- Children in the home or visiting? how old are they?
Small animals - We need photos of your enclosure and full measurements.
 

Rehoming fees:
All costs are a minimum requested donation. This is to help cover our costs. All ferrets are neutered before being rehomed.
Ferrets - £45.00


Outdoor Set Ups:

Ferrets are active animals so need space to run, play and have fun!
For safety, the ferrets would either need a safety corridor or a board, knee height, used as a step over, to stop escapees. 

For us, we chose to have bed boxes up high at the back. To maximize the use of the walk in enclosure, with a runaround tunnel connecting the bed box to the ground level.
Underneath the bed box we have a large shelf which holds bedding and a hammock for the ferrets to enjoy with a wooden ramp as access. For the main part of the run we have litter trays in the back corners, tunnels, spaceship boxes, ball pits, sand to dig in, cat trees to climb and food and water stations. Along with safe ferret toys.

Our enclosures are 11ft x 3 1/2ft for reference.