Results 1 to 15 of 15

Thread: HEATING PAD DANGERS

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    PO Box 424 Howell, NJ 07731-9998
    Posts
    325
    Thanked: 40

    Default HEATING PAD DANGERS

    This past Sunday night I received 3 newborn squirrels who were just taken from their mother unnecessarily because a woman didn't want them in her yard while she having construction done. These babies were only 13-14 grams. They were well hydrated and in excellent shape. I fed them 6 times over night during a 12 hour period of time and they were doing beautifully - eating, peeing, pooping.

    I keep one heating pad upstairs in my house for them for at night and one downstairs for the daytime. In the morning I brought them downstairs and put their sterilite container on the heating pad on low. I fed them and all was great.

    An hour later I checked on them and one was dead. I picked him up and he was like a hot potato. I frantically found the other two, she was lethargic, turning purple and overheated. I tried everything to save her but she died 4 hours later.

    The heating pad had a major malfunction and was too hot to even hold. My poor babies died because of it. I had checked the pad before and after I fed them and it was fine but it must have short circuited in that hours time.

    Some how one little boy survived. He has been slow to gain weight but is finally doing well now. I've named him Hercules.

    This has been the most difficult thread for me write but I needed to share my experiences with all of you. Accidents happen to all of us and sometimes lives are lost but hopefully my story will help spare even one life.

    I've been rehabbing squirrels for the last 4 years and have successfully raised and released over 125 squirrels. I've experienced a lot but nothing has or will ever scar me like this. I am completely devastated.

    PLEASE WATCH YOUR HEATING PADS CLOSELY. CHECK FOR OVERHEATING AND HOT SPOTS.


    IR - Please move or edit this if you need to. Thanks for the other day. I really needed it.

  2. 5 TSBers pass along the fuzzy thanks to I Love Lucy:

    awolf (04-07-2017), frankc (11-17-2019), Ktbnin1133 (06-18-2022), Rocky102014 (03-16-2022), Samthesquiirrel (10-31-2019)

  3. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    City Island, Bronx, NY
    Posts
    51,452
    Thanked: 17932

    Default Re: HEATING PAD DANGERS


    Jean, I know how hard it was for you to write this. But if one little life is saved because of your tragedy, maybe it will lessen the pain. And I will bet that many little lives will be safer, because we will be more diligent in checking our equipment and our babies. Bless you for sharing this.

    I may put a copy of this as a sticky in one or two more other places.
    Island Rehabber
    NY State Licensed
    Wildlife Rehabilitator


    "Ancora Imparo" (I am still learning)
    Michelangelo


    *
    If you can't afford the vet,
    You can't afford a pet.
    NEGLECT IS ABUSE.

    "Better one day in the trees, than a lifetime in a cage."

    '...and the greatest of these, is Love. '

  4. 2 TSBers pass along the fuzzy thanks to island rehabber:

    Ktbnin1133 (06-18-2022), Samthesquiirrel (10-31-2019)

  5. #3
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    prefer not to say
    Posts
    74
    Thanked: 0

    Default Re: HEATING PAD DANGERS

    Quote Originally Posted by I Love Lucy
    This past Sunday night I received 3 newborn squirrels who were just taken from their mother unnecessarily because a woman didn't want them in her yard while she having construction done. These babies were only 13-14 grams. They were well hydrated and in excellent shape. I fed them 6 times over night during a 12 hour period of time and they were doing beautifully - eating, peeing, pooping.

    I keep one heating pad upstairs in my house for them for at night and one downstairs for the daytime. In the morning I brought them downstairs and put their sterilite container on the heating pad on low. I fed them and all was great.

    An hour later I checked on them and one was dead. I picked him up and he was like a hot potato. I frantically found the other two, she was lethargic, turning purple and overheated. I tried everything to save her but she died 4 hours later.

    The heating pad had a major malfunction and was too hot to even hold. My poor babies died because of it. I had checked the pad before and after I fed them and it was fine but it must have short circuited in that hours time.

    Some how one little boy survived. He has been slow to gain weight but is finally doing well now. I've named him Hercules.

    This has been the most difficult thread for me write but I needed to share my experiences with all of you. Accidents happen to all of us and sometimes lives are lost but hopefully my story will help spare even one life.

    I've been rehabbing squirrels for the last 4 years and have successfully raised and released over 125 squirrels. I've experienced a lot but nothing has or will ever scar me like this. I am completely devastated.

    PLEASE WATCH YOUR HEATING PADS CLOSELY. CHECK FOR OVERHEATING AND HOT SPOTS.


    IR - Please move or edit this if you need to. Thanks for the other day. I really needed it.
    Thank you for that warning!!! I've sometime wondered if those things can be trusted. I keep the pad under only half the container so that they call crawl to a cooler spot if they are able.
    Sorry this upset you. Don't blame yourself. Once, I thought I had safely secured the door to the room I was keeping some babies in but my wily dog manage to turn the knob while I was out and get in and crush the skull of one of them. The other was unharmed. We do our best but we aren't infallible.

  6. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2010
    Location
    Earth, Universe
    Posts
    436
    Thanked: 0

    Default Re: HEATING PAD DANGERS

    Sorry for bumping an old thread, but I do snakes and a lot of them are in tubs. Heating is done with FlexWatt heat tape and controlled with Herpstat thermostats.

    There are cheap thermostats in your local Petsmart/Petco, but these are a waste of $30.

    Good, reliable heating solutions will always include a quality thermostat.

    http://spyderrobotics.com/products/herpstat.html

  7. #5
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
    Location
    Indiana
    Posts
    704
    Thanked: 0

    Default Re: HEATING PAD DANGERS


  8. #6
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
    Location
    Georgia
    Posts
    28
    Thanked: 0

    Default Re: HEATING PAD DANGERS

    So precious
    Sqratt's mommy for life

  9. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2013
    Location
    The Green Side
    Posts
    260
    Thanked: 1

    Default Re: HEATING PAD DANGERS

    With our prarie dogs and baby possum we used aquariums till they were up and running and able to climb. We put Zoo Med ReptiTherm heat pads under them either the RH7 or the RH4 depending on what you are using as a substrate and how thick and if on a rack or something solid. Our possum has an RH7 with aprox 1/2" of corn cob and a washcloth under her hut, on an open rack. It stays lukewarm to the touch and runs 24/7 the same temp and designed for continuos use. She loves it. The aquariums are easy to clean and seem to prevent the "Something huge just reached in to get me!!' fright, they see us approach them.
    Just a "what works for me" note.

  10. Serious fuzzy thank you's to magna from:

    Brittanygranger (10-16-2015)

  11. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Location
    Chickasha oklahoma
    Posts
    30
    Thanked: 0

    Default Re: HEATING PAD DANGERS

    Quote Originally Posted by I Love Lucy View Post
    This past Sunday night I received 3 newborn squirrels who were just taken from their mother unnecessarily because a woman didn't want them in her yard while she having construction done. These babies were only 13-14 grams. They were well hydrated and in excellent shape. I fed them 6 times over night during a 12 hour period of time and they were doing beautifully - eating, peeing, pooping.

    I keep one heating pad upstairs in my house for them for at night and one downstairs for the daytime. In the morning I brought them downstairs and put their sterilite container on the heating pad on low. I fed them and all was great.

    An hour later I checked on them and one was dead. I picked him up and he was like a hot potato. I frantically found the other two, she was lethargic, turning purple and overheated. I tried everything to save her but she died 4 hours later.

    The heating pad had a major malfunction and was too hot to even hold. My poor babies died because of it. I had checked the pad before and after I fed them and it was fine but it must have short circuited in that hours time.

    Some how one little boy survived. He has been slow to gain weight but is finally doing well now. I've named him Hercules.

    This has been the most difficult thread for me write but I needed to share my experiences with all of you. Accidents happen to all of us and sometimes lives are lost but hopefully my story will help spare even one life.

    I've been rehabbing squirrels for the last 4 years and have successfully raised and released over 125 squirrels. I've experienced a lot but nothing has or will ever scar me like this. I am completely devastated.

    PLEASE WATCH YOUR HEATING PADS CLOSELY. CHECK FOR OVERHEATING AND HOT SPOTS.


    IR - Please move or edit this if you need to. Thanks for the other day. I really needed it.
    thank you for this post i will not use a heating pad, i have been using a little space heater with 3 temp guages in the nest box so i can keep an eye on what temp. she is. i was afraid to use the heating pad and now i know why. thanks so much

  12. #9
    Join Date
    Oct 2014
    Location
    USA
    Posts
    56
    Thanked: 52

    Default Re: HEATING PAD DANGERS

    I've been using a hermit crab heating pad. It's small and stays at a certain temperature. Since it is so small, it's easy for them to scoot off of area if they get warm. We've used it for birds and rodents, works like a charm and doesn't take up much storage space when not in use.

  13. Serious fuzzy thank you's to karriemed from:

    KCullen (08-24-2021)

  14. #10
    Join Date
    Nov 2014
    Location
    Charlotte NC
    Posts
    18
    Thanked: 0

    Default Re: HEATING PAD DANGERS

    What is the ideal temperature for the inside of the nest box? Is there a suggested range? I don't want to overheat, nor underheat this tiny pinkie.

  15. #11
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    New York
    Posts
    43,984
    Thanked: 21576

    Default Re: HEATING PAD DANGERS

    Quote Originally Posted by Slippy View Post
    What is the ideal temperature for the inside of the nest box? Is there a suggested range? I don't want to overheat, nor underheat this tiny pinkie.
    Put the heating pad on low and make sure it's on the outside of the container only under half.
    This way if he overheats he can crawl to the other side, or if you have enough fleece in there, he
    can crawl to the top.

    For one this size I would suggest 90-95 degrees. I read your other post and he is 12 grams, correct?




  16. #12
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    City Island, Bronx, NY
    Posts
    51,452
    Thanked: 17932

    Default Re: HEATING PAD DANGERS

    I keep my pinkies at a steady 85-88 degrees and humid. Seems to work well for them.
    Island Rehabber
    NY State Licensed
    Wildlife Rehabilitator


    "Ancora Imparo" (I am still learning)
    Michelangelo


    *
    If you can't afford the vet,
    You can't afford a pet.
    NEGLECT IS ABUSE.

    "Better one day in the trees, than a lifetime in a cage."

    '...and the greatest of these, is Love. '

  17. #13
    Join Date
    Oct 2018
    Location
    NC
    Posts
    97
    Thanked: 193

    Default Re: HEATING PAD DANGERS

    One thing I've found which works much better than a heating pad for baby squees is a seed-starting mat with thermostat.

    It is waterproof so you can wipe it down with soap and water if the babies make a mess, and if you are clever enough you can probably even use it outside in a RC since most are made to be set up in outdoor greenhouses.

    A germination mat is also VERY thin-- you can slide it under a shelf inside an enclosure with the cord trailing out so they can't chew on it if they aren't in a container.

    They also tend to have a much more even distribution of the heating elements, which are thin and usually go edge to edge.

    Seed mats also is designed not to turn off, since the point is to maintain a temperature for seed germination. This is important since these days, most commercial heating pads auto-shut off for safety reasons.

    The thermostat is also great-- you can easily adjust up or down, depending on how warm your babies need to be kept and it will tell you the temp it is holding at. It is also not manufactured with the mat but plugs in and can be swapped out if you need to get a new mat, you can use the same thermostat.

    They also tend to be reasonably inexpensive, all things considered.

    Just thought I'd mention this since I hadn't seen it mentioned anywhere else, and it gives me MUCH more peace of mind to know I have this many safety and stopgap measures in place to make sure the babies stay warm and safe!

    https://smile.amazon.com/VIVOSUN-See...s%2C152&sr=8-3
    --
    V/r,

    ~T.

  18. 3 TSBers pass along the fuzzy thanks to Vox:

    island rehabber (03-21-2019), Mel1959 (03-22-2019), Nancy in New York (03-21-2019)

  19. #14
    Join Date
    Sep 2019
    Location
    Massachusetts
    Posts
    233
    Thanked: 494

    Default Re: HEATING PAD DANGERS

    Quote Originally Posted by I Love Lucy View Post
    This past Sunday night I received 3 newborn squirrels who were just taken from their mother unnecessarily because a woman didn't want them in her yard while she having construction done. These babies were only 13-14 grams. They were well hydrated and in excellent shape. I fed them 6 times over night during a 12 hour period of time and they were doing beautifully - eating, peeing, pooping.

    I keep one heating pad upstairs in my house for them for at night and one downstairs for the daytime. In the morning I brought them downstairs and put their sterilite container on the heating pad on low. I fed them and all was great.

    An hour later I checked on them and one was dead. I picked him up and he was like a hot potato. I frantically found the other two, she was lethargic, turning purple and overheated. I tried everything to save her but she died 4 hours later.

    The heating pad had a major malfunction and was too hot to even hold. My poor babies died because of it. I had checked the pad before and after I fed them and it was fine but it must have short circuited in that hours time.

    Some how one little boy survived. He has been slow to gain weight but is finally doing well now. I've named him Hercules.

    This has been the most difficult thread for me write but I needed to share my experiences with all of you. Accidents happen to all of us and sometimes lives are lost but hopefully my story will help spare even one life.

    I've been rehabbing squirrels for the last 4 years and have successfully raised and released over 125 squirrels. I've experienced a lot but nothing has or will ever scar me like this. I am completely devastated.

    PLEASE WATCH YOUR HEATING PADS CLOSELY. CHECK FOR OVERHEATING AND HOT SPOTS.


    IR - Please move or edit this if you need to. Thanks for the other day. I really needed it.
    Hi
    I know this thread is old but I wanted to chime in on this tragic issue. I am a retired electronic engineer of some 40 years. I'll bet without a doubt what happened was one of two things. First the heating wire coils shorted for one reason or an other, BUT my real guess without seeing and being able to examine the pad is there is a component in the heating control called a thermistor. It's job is to send a signal to the control and tell it to shut down or start up depending on were the temperature is set. These thermistors are used in all kinds of appliances for various reasons but usually temperature control. Most manufactures use cheap electronic parts to save money of course. These pads like all electronic appliances are supposed to be UL approved and tested,however not all are they do a sample testing by submitted units from the manufacture. When a thermistor fails it will do one o two things depending on the failure, the unit depending on circuit design will just stop working OR will let in this case the temperature to run uncontrolled. My suggestion in buying a heating pad is DON"T believe all the advertisements that we are the best. Pick a few, check the UL website to see if they really are UL approved, also ask around and see who is using what kind of pad and what there experience has been with it. This is still not a 100% guarantee because all electronic components will fail with use and age at some time. But check and see if the pad in question also has a fail safe, meaning in the event of component failure the unit will shut off.

    I am so sorry this happened to you and those poor babies, and I hope by explaining the causes of your tragic event helps some and gives more people more info on what to look for.

  20. 5 TSBers pass along the fuzzy thanks to frankc:

    HRT4SQRLS (11-17-2019), island rehabber (11-17-2019), KCullen (08-24-2021), Mel1959 (11-17-2019), RockyPops (11-18-2019)

  21. #15
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    sc/nc
    Posts
    6,615
    Thanked: 169

    Unhappy Re: HEATING PAD DANGERS

    Quote Originally Posted by frankc View Post
    Hi
    I know this thread is old but I wanted to chime in on this tragic issue. I am a retired electronic engineer of some 40 years. I'll bet without a doubt what happened was one of two things. First the heating wire coils shorted for one reason or an other, BUT my real guess without seeing and being able to examine the pad is there is a component in the heating control called a thermistor. It's job is to send a signal to the control and tell it to shut down or start up depending on were the temperature is set. These thermistors are used in all kinds of appliances for various reasons but usually temperature control. Most manufactures use cheap electronic parts to save money of course. These pads like all electronic appliances are supposed to be UL approved and tested,however not all are they do a sample testing by submitted units from the manufacture. When a thermistor fails it will do one o two things depending on the failure, the unit depending on circuit design will just stop working OR will let in this case the temperature to run uncontrolled. My suggestion in buying a heating pad is DON"T believe all the advertisements that we are the best. Pick a few, check the UL website to see if they really are UL approved, also ask around and see who is using what kind of pad and what there experience has been with it. This is still not a 100% guarantee because all electronic components will fail with use and age at some time. But check and see if the pad in question also has a fail safe, meaning in the event of component failure the unit will shut off.

    I am so sorry this happened to you and those poor babies, and I hope by explaining the causes of your tragic event helps some and gives more people more info on what to look for.

    I always put a hand towel under and ibetween the carrier. Just because it does get to hot. Even on low. And of course u have to keep an eye out for them just to be safe. I trust no electric anything that has to run all the time.

  22. 2 TSBers pass along the fuzzy thanks to jbtartell:

    frankc (11-18-2019), RockyPops (11-18-2019)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •