This is Susie Lee writing from occasionally sunny Pensacola for the Ferret And Dove Sanctuary, Inc. and here's all the news for the Sanctuary for January, 2005; On Jan 12th, Mr. Buckaroo Babyface Ferret had a chordoma removed from his tail's tip and when he returned from his surgery his little wife, Mrs. Phyllis The Fair Babyface fussed over her gentlemanly husband-ferret and showed us how nuzzling makes a mend go faster. Jan. 13th, we aquired 2 year old Rebel Carouser Ferret who cut a play-swath through the older-ferret playtime establishment, here. We sincerely hope he gets adopted, soon, as several complaints have come in from Bandit Waggy-Tail Ferret, Sebastian Possum-Face Ferret and Socrates Roan Ferret that this furkid's moniker ought to have had something more along the lines of his Tasmanian devilish style in it. We will have a picture of him as soon as he slows down just enough for the shutter to catch him (hah!). For the curious, he looks like Sebastian, only about half Sebastian's size with six times the energy. Jan. 14th, Angel Bumpkin Ferret got a Lupron shot at her vet's for adrenal cancer symptoms and at this date (Jan. 29) is already showing very good improvement. On Jan. 17th we had several volunteers come to help with the general care and cage-cleanings and one of these fine young adults adopted Cassidy Rabbit and Linus Rabbit. later, that same day, we recieved new intakes, CiCi Demitasse Ferret and Roger B. Siamese Ferret, she's four years, he's two years and has enough energy to give the little Rebel Carouser a good wrasslin', evincing a sigh of relief from the aforementioned ferrety complainants. Jan. 20th, we recieved little single-ferret Richelle Golden Panda Ferret, who currently has an adoptive person who is coming in several times a week to get her new fur-kid accustomed to her next human while preparing her home-to-be for a soon-to-be-thoroughly-spoiled Richelle. And then, somewhere in the murky mid-twenties of the month, co-director Susie Lee developed a sudden illness which scared the stuffins out of her and caused the other co-director to smash the panic button through the floor and past the sub-basement. Luckily, with prompt (non-veterinary) medical treatment she has effected a fast recovery (diagnosed as possible ulcerative colitis, cessation of all prescribed meds and a very bland diet, plus some reiki healing from a friend of the Sanctuary, which worked right well, I can now testify!). So we have had to send out the advisement that our hands are *off* the panic-button and we're good as ever, folks. In fact, the originally smashed panic button is being excavated and re-furbished for the next eventual care-person crisis, and we each want to THANK EVERYONE for your concerned responses and for "being there". And so we come to little Sandy LeQuick Ferret, whose "before-and-after" photos are on the web-page from the second time she'd had her Lupron shot for adrenal cancer symptoms. Sandy LeQuick Ferret was purchased from a now-defunct (and very poorly run and managed) privately run pet store back in 1998, as a then six-month old. She was adopted out as a two-year-old and returned to us with her first bout of adrenal cancer symptoms when Lupron was new and even "iffy" as a treatment. Yet Sandy LeQuick responded supremely well to each of her three Lupron shots over the course of four years, making a complete and spectacular recovery each time. She has lived far longer on the Lupron treatments for her adrenal cancer than any other ferret who's been and gone from this facility. And on Jan. 27th she went to sleep and didn't waken. At nearly eight years of age, Sandy LeQuick Ferret has gone gently in the arms of her angels to be with her brother, Spanky LeBeau Ferret and her best friend, Harley Davidson Ferret, away into the brightly green Ferret's Summerlands. [Posted in FML issue 4773]