FERRET-SEARCH@LISTSERV.FERRETMAILINGLIST.ORG
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Wed, 2 Aug 2000 17:37:37 -0400 |
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Rachel, I don't think there's anything wrong with your question. We see
rough coats on a lot of ferrets, and itchy skin, and most of the time the
reason is a diet too low in fatty acids and proteins. Itchy skin can also
indicate allergies, skin conditions, or adrenal disease, but it's a rare
vet who wants to cut open a ferret because it's itchy. Anyway, most of
the time, the coat should improve dramatically within a month or two.
At the very least, after the next coat change, although we often see
improvement somewhat sooner than that. The first change we note is that
the orange-yellow stripe down the spine of many ferrets fed cheap foods
begins to fade. Then the coat softens. Ferretone helps, of course--and so
would cod liver oil. :-) Good food is the most important thing, though.
I'm sure whatever Illura's eating should do the trick. :-)
Some ferrets have naturally coarser coats, as well. Our chocolate Tess is
silky and soft, while silver mitt Figaro has a rougher, coarser coat.
Jen and the Crazy Business
http://home.maine.rr.com/tesseract
[Posted in FML issue 3132]
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