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Thread: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

  1. #21
    FPG Donor ♕ Chrissy's Avatar
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    Default Re: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

    Quote Originally Posted by arrow View Post
    How interesting it will be to see them grow up. Sad with the mother, something must have happened to her. I see hedgehogs almost daily this time of year. Passing cars are the worst danger. My neighbour feeds the local hedgehogs cat food, and they come around every night for it. I think the small ones must reach close to 700 grams as a minimum weight to survive winter. Last year there were stories of small hedhogs in trouble late in auntum. They survived in a family's home, and was awake all winter and was let out in spring.
    Cars are the main danger here too also the fact that their access to countryside and gardens is diminishing. They don't all stay in hibernation for the whole duration but wake up fairly regularly and come out for a bit of food.

    Cat or kitten food is a good source of food for adults and youngsters. We had to make a special feeding box in order to ensure the hedgehogs could easily get in and eat it but access was a bit too twisty for cats.

    At the right time of year our regular hedgehog visitor could be seen travelling across the lawn to the box every evening until she stopped coming and one evening two of them came out of the same box.
    Regards, Chrissy | My Review Blog: inkyfountainpens

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  3. #22
    FPG Donor ♕ Chrissy's Avatar
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    Default Re: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

    Quote Originally Posted by jar View Post
    Our hedgehogs are not quite as cute and have long tails.
    I went and checked on Wikipedia and was surprised to find that there aren't any species of hedgehog left in the US now. That's a shame
    Regards, Chrissy | My Review Blog: inkyfountainpens

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    Default Re: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

    They grow very fast. We had Junior for a while, though he was almost full grown so we didn't need to keep him long, and then Generalissimo who was covered in fly eggs and mites - fortunately we have a local vet who specialises in hedgehogs and gave us a hedgehog version of Frontline to get rid of the parasites. Generalissimo was tiny, about the same size as your Chrissy, and after about a month was nearly 700g. He ate like a pig. No table manners at all. I would not have trusted him with the best china!

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    Default Re: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

    Dan Antopolski at the 2009 Edinburgh Fringe (a festival for comedey) won the award with:

    Hedgehogs - why can't they just share the hedge?


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  8. #25
    FPG Donor ♕ Chrissy's Avatar
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    Default Re: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

    Quote Originally Posted by amk View Post
    They grow very fast. We had Junior for a while, though he was almost full grown so we didn't need to keep him long, and then Generalissimo who was covered in fly eggs and mites - fortunately we have a local vet who specialises in hedgehogs and gave us a hedgehog version of Frontline to get rid of the parasites. Generalissimo was tiny, about the same size as your Chrissy, and after about a month was nearly 700g. He ate like a pig. No table manners at all. I would not have trusted him with the best china!
    I watched an episode of Mountain Vets last week and the head vet at their animal rescue place had three that were handed in. She took them home and was fortunate enough to have a large dog crate from the centre to keep them in and at five months old she had a football shaped male that she called "Fatty" that was the first one she released. If they get too overweight then they can have problems curling up into a ball tight enough to keep predators off so it can be a fine line. She showed how she mixed their food that consisted of tinned cat food plus some grated carrot and some oats served in a fairly large, flattish dish, then she tipped on a jug of milk and said they eat it all!

    By comparison I've borrowed some puppy panels from next door that join together to make a hexagonal shaped pen. Yesterday when we put it on the lawn all three of them were pushing themselves through the bars and we were trying to steer them away from the garden borders. It must have looked quite funny.
    Regards, Chrissy | My Review Blog: inkyfountainpens

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  10. #26
    Senior Member jar's Avatar
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    Default Re: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

    Quote Originally Posted by Chrissy View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by jar View Post
    Our hedgehogs are not quite as cute and have long tails.
    I went and checked on Wikipedia and was surprised to find that there aren't any species of hedgehog left in the US now. That's a shame
    Yup. No hedgehogs native to the Americas and yes, it is a shame.

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  12. #27
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    Default Re: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

    Quote Originally Posted by jar View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Chrissy View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by jar View Post
    Our hedgehogs are not quite as cute and have long tails.
    I went and checked on Wikipedia and was surprised to find that there aren't any species of hedgehog left in the US now. That's a shame
    Yup. No hedgehogs native to the Americas and yes, it is a shame.
    Yes, but we have armadillos. Armored balls vs spiky balls.

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  14. #28
    Senior Member jar's Avatar
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    Default Re: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

    Quote Originally Posted by Wile E Coyote View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by jar View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Chrissy View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by jar View Post
    Our hedgehogs are not quite as cute and have long tails.
    I went and checked on Wikipedia and was surprised to find that there aren't any species of hedgehog left in the US now. That's a shame
    Yup. No hedgehogs native to the Americas and yes, it is a shame.
    Yes, but we have armadillos. Armored balls vs spiky balls.
    Really? Around here they are usually more like pancakes than bocci balls.

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    Default Re: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

    That's great Chrissy! In London, we see foxes and the occasional drunken rat. I think my boys were surprised to see a real hedgehog out in the country - I'm not sure they'd realised they were real animals

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  18. #30
    FPG Donor ♕ Chrissy's Avatar
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    Default Re: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

    Quote Originally Posted by Joseph H View Post
    That's great Chrissy! In London, we see foxes and the occasional drunken rat. I think my boys were surprised to see a real hedgehog out in the country - I'm not sure they'd realised they were real animals
    I've seen fewer foxes than hedgehogs here, but I hear them at night. As long as we are only talking furry animals - I've never seen a drunken rat. LOL

    Reminds me of our rat story. Once we saw a rat in our garden during broad daylight. It must have been an escapee because it was a dark ginger colour with white underneath. It kept eating my bird food for days and in the end my OH bought a rat trap and set it behind the greenhouse. A couple of days later I thought the trap had moved position and when I looked the trap had gone off but the rat was just laying there beside it with no visible injuries apart from a small dot of blood on its nose. I was absolutely terrified and phoned OH. He told me to pick it up and throw it in the bin but I was too scared to do that in case it woke up. I came inside and got my grabber but this was such a huge rat it was difficult to pick it up with that. I somehow eventually managed to get it into a plastic bag that I knotted several times before placing it in the bin. Just in case it woke up.
    Last edited by Chrissy; September 4th, 2022 at 02:06 PM.
    Regards, Chrissy | My Review Blog: inkyfountainpens

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  20. #31
    Senior Member Lloyd's Avatar
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    Default Re: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

    @Chrissy Have you seen this story?
    https://people.com/baby-hedgehog-res...om-pom-8620901

    Sent from my SM-G991U using Tapatalk
    M: I came here for a good argument.
    A: No you didn't; no, you came here for an argument.
    M: An argument isn't just contradiction.
    A: It can be.
    M: No it can't. An argument is a connected series of statements intended to establish a proposition.
    A: No it isn't.
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    A: Look, if I argue with you, I must take up a contrary position.
    M: Yes, but that's not just saying 'No it isn't.'
    A: Yes it is!
    M: No it isn't!

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  22. #32
    FPG Donor ♕ Chrissy's Avatar
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    Default Re: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

    Yes Lloyd, Thanks for asking. It really made me laugh when we saw it on the BBC News yesterday.

    Call us cynical but our take on it was that it was specially made for the Internet just to get loads of views. A real hedgehog neither looks nor feels absolutely anything like the soft pom pom from a woolly hat as my hands and fingers can frequently attest to.
    Last edited by Chrissy; March 30th, 2024 at 02:43 AM.
    Regards, Chrissy | My Review Blog: inkyfountainpens

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  24. #33
    Senior Member dneal's Avatar
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    Default Re: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

    I'd plant a whole hedge if I could grow me some hedgehogs.
    "A truth does not mind being questioned. A lie does not like being challenged."

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  26. #34
    FPG Donor ♕ Chrissy's Avatar
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    Default Re: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

    We have a movement operated camera that we had to put out as every last granule of the hedgehog food started disappearing every night. A rat turned out to be the culprit and following some serious planning and restrictions of "hedgehog access" to part of the yard we were successful in getting rid of that.

    Now a male hedgehog seems to have found his way into the garden (under the gate) and he seems to be less interested in eating and more interested in the fact that the two hedgehogs that live here are females. LOL
    Regards, Chrissy | My Review Blog: inkyfountainpens

  27. #35
    Senior Member Lloyd's Avatar
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    Default Re: I've become the local hedgehog rescuer

    Quote Originally Posted by Chrissy View Post
    We have a movement operated camera that we had to put out as every last granule of the hedgehog food started disappearing every night. A rat turned out to be the culprit and following some serious planning and restrictions of "hedgehog access" to part of the yard we were successful in getting rid of that.

    Now a male hedgehog seems to have found his way into the garden (under the gate) and he seems to be less interested in eating and more interested in the fact that the two hedgehogs that live here are females. LOL
    I wonder if he'll be attracted to a gray pompom.

    Sent from my SM-G991U using Tapatalk
    M: I came here for a good argument.
    A: No you didn't; no, you came here for an argument.
    M: An argument isn't just contradiction.
    A: It can be.
    M: No it can't. An argument is a connected series of statements intended to establish a proposition.
    A: No it isn't.
    M: Yes it is! It's not just contradiction.
    A: Look, if I argue with you, I must take up a contrary position.
    M: Yes, but that's not just saying 'No it isn't.'
    A: Yes it is!
    M: No it isn't!

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