Trus my foster old-timers to find the best snoozing spots! I brought from Quebec lots of washed uncombed and combed sheep fleece. Our foster ferret with lymphoma, Qannik, chose a paper bag full of plain fleece while his cage mate, Piccolo, emptied a bag of fluffy combed wool and buried herself in it. I was planning to weave ferret sleping bags with the wool and shrink it to turn it into fleece but I decided to tightly weave combed wool and wash it in cold water to keep it as fluffy as possible! Now that the weather is colder, it is time to get the warm ferret bags out. It is time to clean your closet: do you own badly out of fashion, full of holes or stained wool sweaters that you cannot give to a thrift store? They make good ferret bedding, providing your ferret has not decide he likes to eat wool of course. I turned three old wool sweaters into ferret sleeping bags fro one or two small ferrets. I washed the sweaters in hot water and dried them in the dryer. They shrank and make good small sleeping bags. If you are a 6 feet tall American instead of a 5 feet tall French Canadian, you might obtain medium or big sized sleeping bags 8-). I left the sleeves on but they are often in the way: I suggest to cut them and sew the hole before washing= them. Lorraine Tremblay & Pepee La Pew, Sanka, Mukluk, Presto, Snoreau & Boum Boum Foster ferrets: Piccolo & Qannik (snow in inuktitut) Owner of the Ferret Curiosity Shop Webmistress of Mustela Canada & Mustela Francia http://www.ferretcuriosity.on.ca [Posted in FML issue 2105]