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Baby Mammals


The advice here varies considerably according to the species. In many cases it is not unusual for mothers to leave their babies unattended for several hours. It is important to remember that mammal parents recognise their babies through scent. So if you handle a baby, Mum may reject or even kill it. So you must always avoid handling the baby other than to remove it from immediate danger. If you must handle it then try to minimise your scent by using gloves or wiping your hands on the grass before hand.

So, when should I rescue a baby mammal?

When should I not rescue a baby mammal?

What should I do next?

Babies are very delicate so it is very important that you follow these guidelines and seek help urgently.

Any baby with it's eyes still shut is unable to regulate it's own body temperature. It may be scorching outside but a very young baby will still need supplementary heat. Ideally fill a hot water bottle (not too hot) and wrap it in a towel. Place it in a box twice it's size so the baby can crawl off the bottle if it gets too hot. If you have a thermometer check the temperature on the bottle - it should be about 30 degrees celsius. The baby should feel pleasantly warm to the touch. Allowing the baby to get too hot or too cold can be fatal!

Very young babies may need feeding as often as every two hours BUT this is a difficult and specialist job and should not be undertaken by the inexperienced. It is all too easy to get it wrong and drown the baby or make it inhale the milk and develop pneumonia. NEVER, ever, ever give a baby cow's milk. It is too high in lactose for them to digest and can cause diarrhoea, dehydration and death. This includes skimmed milk, evaporated milk and watered down cows milk. Cow's milk in any form is a huge no-no! If for some reason you cannot get help for the baby quickly and you know what you are doing you can feed the baby warmed goats milk or a kitten or puppy formula such as Lactol, Cimicat or Esbilac (available from pet shops and vets). If the babies eyes are shut it will not be able to toilet for itself. You will need to gently stimulate the genitals with a damp cotton bud until the baby passes urine. This is vital! If the baby does not go to the toilet it will get an infection and become very ill.

Remember, these are emergency measures only and should only be to tide you over until you can seek urgent assistance. If you cannot find a wildlife rescue on the links above please call St Tiggywinkles on 01844 292292 for further advice and details of rescues in your area.


Ooh it's really cute, can I keep it as a pet?

No, no. no, no, no! If you take only one thing away from this website please let it be this. Wild animals are just that. They are not pets. The animals we keep as pets have been domesticated over centuries. Handrearing these animals is difficult, incredibly time consuming and oh so very easy to get wrong. Many's the time I've been brought emaciated animals with terrible diarrhoea and pneumonia because someone has tried to rear them and got it wrong. Even if you do get through this stage when the animal grows up the call of the wild will get them and that cute cuddly baby will turn into a manic, frustrated creature who will bite you through fear, anger and frustration at being caged when it should be running free. Wild animals cannot be toilet trained and cannot be taught the difference between right and wrong. They will mess in your house, they will destroy your furniture, chew through your doors, attack your children etc. Quite aside from all this it is illegal to take in a wild animal and not release it when fit.

If you're reading this website, if you've gone to the trouble to rescue something then you must really love animals. Please demonstrate this by doing what is best for it. Please take it to an experienced wildlife rescue so that it can have the best possible chance of being rehabilitated and returned to the wild. If you have fallen in love with it why not offer to help at your local wildlife rescue and perhaps get involved with rearing babies for them? Some rescues have foster schemes where helpers take babies home with them either full time or even just an evening a week to help ease the burden on them.