On collars: a lot of people seem to use normal pet collars, but I use ball chain (a trick that two ferret-lovin' friends taught me). The ball chain seems to stay on well, as well as being small enough for a ferret and highly adjustable. Dors (24 oz female) can use lamp pull chain, but Seldon (46 oz male) might break that gauge, so for him I use toilet ball chain (about twice as heavy). If they get out of the ball chain collar, you cut it one ball smaller (but never so small that your slinky couldn't pull out of it if he/she had to). You can easily attach a small bell and id tag to such a collar using well-trimmed wire. I got very small (but loud) bells from "Worldbeads" in Seattle, and little id tags, engraved, from Sears here in Co Springs. On clipping nails: I usually clip more than once; once not too close for a rough cut, then once or twice more, closer; maybe this will help. Make sure to do it in a strong light. I can do Dors and Seldon just by turning them on their backs and clipping away, but you might try the ferretone trick (putting ferretone on their belly just before claw clipping) if yours struggle a lot (maybe they'll move less if happily absorbed in sweet sticky stuff). On carrots: I'm not sure, but you might have to watch feeding carrots to Rascal and Sable. I'm not a vet, but a ferret shelter owner in AZ told me she's seen ferrets develop intestinal blockages due to large lumps of undigested carrot. Perhaps Dr. Williams or Dr. Brown knows whether ferrets can digest carrots. On carpet sharks in general: I thought of a good one-line description of their lives: "We're having a great time and we're glad you could join the party." Todd Cromwell [log in to unmask] (719) 599-3611 [Posted in FML issue 0805]