Originally Posted by
olorin19
I have overwintered then released six squirrels - four single males plus a brother/sister pair. (And I have two sisters this winter....) My location is much closer to Ontario than Florida, and I absolutely agree with Mel that this little guy should not be released this year.
A sun room ought to work fine, provided they have lots of fleece, etc. to make a snug nest. If it gets really cold out there, you could always work out a way to have a heating pad on LOW under part of their sleeping area - obviously you need to do this so that they are not able to reach the heating pad, cord, etc., as they will chew whatever they can reach.
There is lots of information on this site about how and what to feed.
If you are planning on giving them the run of your sun porch, then please consider:
(1) Will they be visible to passerby, etc., and if so, is keeping a squirrel legal in Ontario? If not legal, then discretion is important and you might need a different location.
(2) They will chew, so you need to make sure there is nothing on the porch that you mind being chewed and nothing there where they will hurt themselves.
(3) Provide branches to climb and chew, a large container with dirt or mulch where they can dig, etc.
(4) Toys, etc. - Give them lots of options so they can play and explore.
I do not generally have them with their nest box until they go in their release cage. The reason is that I tried this once with a 3-4 month old and they chewed their nest box to where it was no longer useful. So prior to the release cage, I tend to use fleece hammocks with bedding inside. I also give them leaves and branches, as they like to help line their own nest.
Mine have been overwintered in a large cage in my office with supervised play time out of the cage twice a day, usually on my sun porch. While others may disagree, especially with a single squirrel, I spend lots of time interacting with them out of the cage. With mama or siblings, you are their family. They will be cuddly when younger, but as they get older, many will be happy to perch on you, eat from your hand, etc. but not want you to actually hold them. A few will get aggressive and territorial with you - one of my six did this. They are each different, so you need to pay attention and let them show you what they want and need from you.
Good luck!