Things You'll Need
- Towels
- Heating pad
- Cardboard box
- Old sweatshirt
- Flannel shirt
- Powdered kitten's milk
- Plastic syringes
- Cotton pad
- Nuts
- Grains
- Fruit
- Vegetables
- Bird cage
- Tree branches
- Cloth
Instructions
Lay a folded towel on a spot where you will be keeping the baby squirrels, with a heating pad positioned between the folds of the towel. Baby squirrels younger than five weeks require outside sources for heat because they do not produce their own body heat.
Place a cardboard box that is open at the top and bottom over the towels and heating pad. Lay an old sweatshirt or flannel shirt down inside the box, on top of the towel. This will be the bedding for the squirrels to nestle in.
Mix one part of powdered kitten's milk with four parts of warm water. For baby squirrels less than three weeks old, use a 1cc syringe; and for squirrels older than five weeks, use a 3cc syringe. Feed the baby squirrels every two to three hours.
Apply a warm, wet cotton pad to the squirrels' genitals after feeding. Massage them gently. This is necessary to stimulate the squirrels to eliminate body wastes.
Feed the squirrels nuts, fruits and vegetables when they are between four and five weeks old. Give them broccoli, squash, carrots, mushrooms, pecans, pumpkin seeds, sunflower seeds in the shell, apples and any crunchy fruits.
Transfer the flying squirrels to a bird cage as temporary housing when they reach approximately five or six weeks of age. Provide natural tree branches in the cage so that the animals can climb, and lay cloth down at the bottom for bedding material.