Well it is that time of the year again and we all know that heat rises and cold falls. Typically, when the weather gets colder (as it will in most areas of our country) people pull on the socks, house slippers, warmer clothes and turn the heat on in the house. Not wanting the heating bill to be so large, people will dress warmer and keep the thermometer down a bit. This can present a problem for some of the shortest 4-footed members who live in our homes. We need to make sure the floors are warm enough for the ferrets, especially if their beds are on the floor areas, not up in condo tops. Also, make sure there is plenty of warm, soft bedding available for them to cover up with and snuggle down into. Ferrets do catch colds and need the same warmth and protection that we people do during the cold months. Never, never house a ferret outside in unheated (or air conditioned in summer) environments. They cannot survive in temperature extremes. They are domestic animals and fragile in this respect. They need moderate temperatures just like we do.THey catch colds and flus from people so keep them protected from ill family and friends. If a ferret is coughing, he/she needs medical attention. It could be from a cold, upper respiratory infection/bronchitis, pneumonia(very serious), or hair ball disease--potentially life threatening also. Please remember to make needed adjustments for the little ones in your care, now that it is cold weather again. Keep their cages, beds, condos, away from drafty cold areas, and give them warm, ferret-safe bedding. A small percentage of ferrets do chew on and ingest bedding or fabric materials so check once in a while to see if you have a ferret prone to doing this. The risk here is intestinal blockages--life threatening. But most ferrets just cuddle up and do not ingest fabrics. Happy holidays and God bless you all---furred and otherwise! :o) Jan and the furry baker's dozen at Gracie's Place in the Land of Oz [Posted in FML issue 2874]