
Originally Posted by
CritterMom
Yup. This baby isn't neuro - she is bright and alert - no head drift, no "stargazing." In fact I am 95% sure I know what is happening because Tip taught me that this past winter.
Tip showed up at the Squirrel Cafe in February. I was working in the kitchen and looked up to see a squirrel laying on it's side in the Cafe. I watched while he ate his fill, and as he climbed down and started away, it was obvious that he was laying on his side because his right hind leg was clearly dislocated. In fact, at one point while he was on the platform eating, I could see that it was totally disconnected at the joint - the only thing holding it were tendons, and it swung freely if he wasn't careful. The pain that must have caused made me weak. Any rehabber or vet would have immediately euthanized him.
I have far too many squirrels at the Cafe to set a trap to catch a particular squirrel, and despite his problem staying upright, he could still run, and in fact was clearly a VERY dominant squirrel - it took DAYS before anyone started throwing him out of the food area, and then they only did it with multiple squirrels going after him at the same time. So I did what I usually do - try to stuff the animal as full of food (with hidden vitamins and stuff) EVERY time I see it, so it goes home into it's safe nest and sleeps for half a day. I could usually spot him coming in to the yard due to his issues, and began to keep him eating down on the deck so the others could eat at the platform and leave him alone. 2 giant pecan halves glued together with a wad of nut butter of some kind with Henry's vitamins and extra calcium hidden in it were very popular. He cooperated with my program completely.
Some day I will write up his whole story but cut to the chase...the day I watched him run up the trunk of the big silver maple in my backyard, and hang head down by his BACK FEET to eat a walnut, I knew he was going to be fine. He is hard to pick out now other than being a tad clumsier sometimes but I pick him out more by the other's behavior - his status is back and NOBODY comes for Tip.
I have thought of it a lot. There is a procedure done by vets called an "FHO" or Femoral Head Ostectomy. If the hip dislocates, you can either do 5 figures worth of artificial hip surgery, or you can cut the end of the femoral bone off and anchor it into the "cup" of the hip where it rests, and it will fasten down and eventually internal scarring will create a crude "new hip." I have to assume that something like this occurred naturally in this case. That hip was dangling free without any control, and three months later I often can't pick this squirrel out of a crowd.
Feed the heck out of her. Squirrels are actually the laziest things - if they don't have to forage because they are hungry they like NOTHING so much as a nap. And she is safest in her nest.