Yes, ferrets can have chemo for some types of cancer, and do so rather often. Check in the back issues of the FML using the search feature and you'll read of multiple cases. The first that I ever read about working for full cure rather than for just slowing the growths ( a common result) was Katie (not Kathy who is a different person) Fritz' Bandit. (That should be somewhere in the 8 to 10 years ago range if my recollections are accurate.) The Jeglum protocol at the time for cats was used with size taken into account with 3 year old Bandit for his lymphoma. Using pred for slowing growths had already been done before then as with our Fritter. Bandit lived to be something like 8 years old. Fritter got something like 8 months from chemo and later Hjalmar got something like 14. Neither was young, unlike Bandit who was in his prime. The first case of which I have read in which it made any difference in JL (though it did not sure it given that it had already reached neurological tissue) was a ferret Cindy Sooy had and that was written up in the American Ferret Report from the American Ferret Association. Ed, the sound of that alarm may be painful to her. When I was a child and a pre-teen I actually had unusually good hearing both in terms of range and softness (though a touch fuzzy on the precision part) and some of the buzzing alarms were quite painful for me (great way to start a day really grumpy -- with pain waking you). Think you should invest in a different alarm; it's cheaper than hearing tests. :-) I have a great battery one with a rooster that I got through Light House, and have read ads for a range of sounds. Loads of people HATE buzzers so quite a variety is available. Buzzers are so late 50s-early 60s. ;-) :-) [Posted in FML issue 3092]