Originally Posted by
CritterMom
Take his grapes, avocados and cantaloupe away! Seriously - if he has sweet, yummy stuff like that available he will ignore his blocks. Blocks and ONLY blocks at first, and then when he is eating them well, begin to phase fresh veggies and limited fruit into the diet. Like human children, you have to MAKE them eat well at first!
The natural wood perches are okay but usually very small. Honestly, purchasing indoor pine boards at a Home Depot or Lowes - 1x2, 1x3, 1x4, etc., is a lot cheaper for making shelves and planks to walk on and the soft wood is fun for them to chew as well.
He will enter a really challenging phase of squirrel development later this year (save this - that sentence will be a winner at this year's Understatement Of The Year competition). Somewhere around 16-18 weeks, the hormone fairy shows up with, apparently, a tractor trailer full of testosterone and dumps it on them all at once. Your cuddly little schmoopy poopy will become sort of an adorable chainsaw in a squirrel suit. Do not blame him - he can't help it. But they need a whole lot of run around time somewhere to drain some of the energy and YOU need to come up with a way that you can continue to handle him and keep the facial lacerations to a bare minimum.* It is VERY obvious that whoever it was that wrote the script for "Edward Scissorhands" rehabbed squirrels at some point in their life.
They actually do eventually settle down, but you have a couple of challenging months before that happens!
* I can hook you up with directions to make a "head cage" which is, appropriately enough, a wire mesh cage for your head. It is the perfect accessory for the layers of sweatshirts you will be wearing.