>great, but I'm a little worried about them playing to rough with each >other!!!! Captain Tripps( my big boy) tends to look like he's hurting >Ozzy ( my baby girl), she'll let out yelps every now & then.... Most ferrets play really rough. I would say that unless Ozzy is screaming, bleeding, and trying to run away, she is probably having fun for the most part. We have a six month old girl that is the epitome of a wired ferret. She is constantly into everything. She jumps pretty high; onto the aquariums, the computer desk, the toilet....wherever she wants to go, she figures out a way to get there. She has about a dozen toys that she moves from place to place. Mom asked today, laughingly if there was a tranquilizer for ferrets. ( calm down, people, she was not serious) Just in the time it has taken to type this, I have had to "rescue" her four times! Because she is such an active ferret, we have to cage her when we are not home. She gets plenty of time out, at least 3 times a day, from a half hour to three hours each time. If we didn't cage her, she wouldn't sleep!!!! The kit that we got at the same time gets caged with her, partly to keep her company. Our other four have free roam during the day, and are caged at night. That is mostly so *I* can sleep. They wear bell collars- so we can find them easier and to keep us from stepping on the when they are suddenly *there* under our feet. Those little bells ringing all night would keep me awake. >My niece said that she heard there is a ferret named Stretch that is to be >released soon. I keep watching and asking a different stores, but so far >no Ferret Beanie Baby. I don't collect Beanies, but I'd buy one! There is a Petco Paw Pal, though. >NONE of us are perfect and life IS a learning experience. I am willing to bet that most of us with ferrets knew very little when we got our first ferret. With any pet or child, whatever, sometimes you have to learn as you go. Lists/forums such as this have taught us more about ferrets than we every learned from reading books (there are plenty of bad ones out). When Steve and I were upset this weekend about a pet shop owner bopping the kits on the nose when they bit (the breeder told them to do that) and having a leather glove to handle them, I reminded him that with our first two, the MF literature suggested tapping the nose to break them of biting, and we did just that. We didn't know any better. But they did learn not to bite, and luckily are two very well behaved ferrets in their old age. Anyway, you learn as you go. Steve and Becky and six spoiled ferrets [Posted in FML issue 2768]