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“I got a call from a finder of a baby squirrel that fell from a tree in her yard,” writes a wildlife rehabber on the caption of this sweet video. “I was able to go over the process of ...
Longo found Peanut as a baby squirrel in the middle of a busy Manhattan street. After eight months of rehabilitation, Longo tried to release Peanut back into the wild. A day and a half later ...
Peanut was an eastern gray squirrel found and rescued in 2017 by Mark Longo. Longo was driving home from work [ 1 ] when he saw the squirrel's mother killed by a car in New York City. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] A mechanical engineer at the time, [ 4 ] Longo sought a shelter for Peanut but was unsuccessful, and he bottle-fed the squirrel for the next eight ...
After discovering it was an injured baby squirrel, she began caring for it and chronicled its rehabilitation on social media, hoping to get advice and assistance from others. The DNR found out she ...
A rescued baby eastern gray squirrel being fed using a syringe. Wildlife rehabilitation is the process of caring for injured, sick, orphaned, or displaced wild animals with the goal of releasing them back into their natural habitat. It involves medical treatment, temporary housing, and specialized care for a variety of species, from birds and ...
Longo first took in Peanut seven years ago when he found the squirrel as a baby. Longo saw Peanut's mother get hit by a car and die, so Longo took Peanut in when he couldn't find a rescue ...
An upstate man whose beloved squirrel was cruelly killed by the state said he was treated like a “terrorist” when 10 government agents descended on his home during a five-hour raid.
The decision to euthanize the squirrel was met with such criticism that Jake Blumencranz, a state lawmaker, proposed legislation to improve animal rights statutes, calling it “Peanut’s Law ...