
A
ferret cage should contain a:
- Litter box with a very low entrance
- Water bottle and a clip-on dish of water
- Food container (crock or clip-on), with
the food he's accustomed to
- Sleeping tube or other nest
Suggestions for ferret
nests
When providing a sleeping container in a
cage, try to approximate what the ferret would
choose. Their priorities are darkness, privacy,
and a soft nest with a snug fit. Ferrets are not
claustrophobic: they are burrowing animals by nature, and like to feel
the walls closing in around them.
Most
ferrets like the commercial sleeping tubes that
are available in some pet shops or in mail order
or on-line catalogs. These are washable fabric
tubes open at both ends so that several ferrets
can get in at once, which is what they prefer to
do. Sleeping tubes were inspired by, and may be
economically replaced by, the sleeve of a
sweatshirt or the leg of a pair of jogging
pants. Some ferrets prefer sleeping in winter
hats or wool socks.
Hammocks
that attach to the cage wire are also popular:
some of these have an imitation sheepskin
lining. Some ferrets love hammocks, others don't
consider them nesting material at all. If your
ferret expresses no interest in a new hammock,
try hanging it at different levels or varying
the shape of the sleeping surface. Ferrets are
not afraid to express their opinions and may
flatly refuse to use the newly purchased hammock
as a hammock. However, they may enjoy sleeping
under the same hammock if it is put on the floor
or into a sleeping container.
Small plastic storage boxes are good ferret
beds. Tie, tape, or clip them to the cage wire
or the ferrets will move them around and tip
them over. Add some nesting material, like a
T-shirt or a sweatshirt sleeve. Ferrets will
also arrange an ordinary terry hand towel over
themselves to make a private nest. Fabric cat
beds are also appealing ferret nests when
'covers' are added, and these cannot be tipped
over.
Ferrets are gregarious by nature and like to
sleep in a heap. Even when several beds are
available in a cage of ferrets, they usually all
sleep in one.
Special conditions
Hot weather:
In warm summer months, ferrets should be housed
in the coolest area possible, or in an
air-conditioned room. They do not tolerate heat
well and will die of heat stroke if left for
more than a few minutes in a very warm,
unventilated area (over 80°F).
Living in the garage-WE
DO NOT RECOMMEND THIS UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES!
Many ferrets owned by children end up living in
the garage because the mother of the family does
not want to clean up after the ferret, and no
one notices the smell of the dirty cage when it
is in the garage.
What could be sadder than a healthy,
energetic young animal confined 24 hours a day
to a cage in a damp, dimly lit garage or
basement, with nothing to look at, nowhere to
play, and no one to play with? These animals are
so eager to play when they are removed from the
cage that they don't want to be restrained for
even a second, and they then may get a
reputation for biting or scratching. Like dogs
left tied to a dog house in the back yard, these
ferrets may eventually be driven to antisocial
behavior. If the children forget to feed the
ferret, no one notices, and it may be so hungry
that it bites the next hand that reaches into
the cage. If you don't get a good look at your
ferret every day, you will not know if it is
feeling sick until it is very sick or dying.
The more fortunate of the garage-dwellers end
up in ferret shelters, but many more
misunderstood little ferrets are sentenced for
life to solitary confinement. If you intend to
confine your ferret 100% of the time to a cage
in the garage or basement, or even to a large
exercise cage outdoors, consider a different
kind of pet. Ferrets want to share your home and
be involved in your life.
If you lose your ferret
Ferrets are burrowing animals by nature and
like to have a dark, private, den-like nest to
sleep in. In a house, the spots they select are
predictable. If your ferret disappears, you will
probably find it in one of these locations:
- In any box-like container
- Inside a pile of clothing
- Inside a piece of furniture (a couch,
chair, box spring, or mattress – if they
can't find a way in, they'll make one)
-
Inside
an appliance
- Under a kitchen or bathroom cupboard
- In a drawer – ferrets can climb up the
back of a dresser or kitchen cabinet and get
into the drawers, where they make a
comfortable nest in your clean clothing or
dish towels