Ferrets do not like to be restrained and prefer
to do exactly as they please most of the time.
The younger the ferrets, the less likely they
are to want to cuddle. Normal behavior for
just-weaned kits is to wrestle and chew on each
other most of their waking moments. They will
try to do this with people, too, and may bite
hard enough to cause pain without intending to
hurt you.
Children are more likely than adults
to panic and yank their hands back, causing more
serious bites that break the skin. Kits can be
taught not to bite, but it takes time, as it
does for puppies and kittens. This is one reason
ferrets are not recommended for children who are
too young or too active to learn to play gently
with the ferret, and not to encourage it to
rough-house as it does with its littermates.
A child who suddenly and roughly tries to
pick up or hold onto a ferret that does not want
to be restrained may be bitten or scratched.
This is most likely with kits up to 9 or 10
months of age, when they are at their most
active and never want to be still. Older ferrets
will tolerate much indignity and may be
longsuffering in the hands of children they
learn to trust. Many older pets are surprisingly
tolerant of handling by strangers.
Children
are rarely responsible enough to make sure the
ferret can not get out of the safety of his play
area, and don't realize how easily a small
animal may be fatally injured by being crushed
in a recliner or door. Ferrets are not good pets
for young children who do not have responsible
and knowledgeable adult supervision. Even older
children still need an adult to guide them in
taking care of a pet.
Do ferrets really eat
babies?
There have been some highly publicized
incidents where a young infant left alone with a
young ferret has been seriously injured or
killed, and because of this, extremists have
claimed that ferrets are not suitable pets for
anyone, with or without children. Some of the
'ferrets' in these incidents have actually been
ferret-polecat crosses. Wild polecats and
hunting ferrets eat baby rabbits, groundhogs,
rats, and mice that they find in burrows: it is
natural for them to attack milky-smelling
creatures. In the few cases where human infants
have been attacked by ferrets, both the ferrets
and the babies appear to have been neglected by
the adults who should have been responsible for
them.
An infant should never be left alone with a
ferret or with any other animal. Many mature
ferrets are entirely trustworthy with the young
members of the household, sharing nap time and
never taking the slightest nibble at clutching
baby hands. You must take responsibility for
supervising both the baby and the animal, making
sure that neither one hurts the other in their
early encounters.