FERRET-SEARCH@LISTSERV.FERRETMAILINGLIST.ORG
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Date: | Wed, 22 Jul 1998 10:55:41 -0400 |
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Hi,
If you have no AC and you're faced with the problems of keeping ferrets
cool in your house, you could try what I do.
Michigan only gets a few days above 90 a year. I've found that my ferrets
tolerate temps up to 90 perfectly fine; they sleep more when it's in the
80's, but they're still all curled up in a big (warm) pile inside their
hammock until it hits 90. At 90, they start stretching out on the cage
floor and shelves...anyway.
Overnight, I open all my windows and use 2 or more fans to blow night air
into the apartment. Usually temps get down into the 70s at night even when
it's 90+ during the day. At 8 am or so, or whenever the sun gets over the
trees and starts heating things up, I drop all the blinds and curtains,
shut all the windows, and try to lock my apartment up into a nice dark cool
(hopefully) cave for the day. This works to keep the place a good 10-15
degrees below outside temps until about 6 or 7pm, at which point I give them
all cold fresh water and let them out so they can find the coolest spots in
the house for themselves.
Yesterday it was in the mid-90's here with 62% humidity making a 100+ degree
heat index, and all the ferrets were bright and chipper all day. It stayed
about mid-70s in my apartment until the mid evening.
Take especial care that the windows on the sides of the building where the
sun hits are very well covered; I've found that simple things like turning
the blinds louvers the wrong way allow enough sun to come in to heat my
apartment up quickly.
Melissa
<> <> <> <> <> <>
<> melissa litwicki [log in to unmask]
<> i'd like to meet a spaceman who's got it goin' on
[Posted in FML issue 2378]
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