March 5, 2026
Nature Done Wright
Incorporating the Celery Farm and Screech Owl Companion blogs
Oops, they did it again
I have been swamped at work, and had not checked in on the squirrel family in well over a day.
When I got home last night, I activated the video monitor and saw the above scene.
At first I thought the babies might be well-hidden, but usually there’s some thrashing after while.
Nothing had changed this morning.
Apparently Mrs. Squirrel likes to move the babies. She moved them 19 days ago, then brought them back a week later.
This may be the last we see of the four babies in the nesting box — or not. These squirrels are impossible to predict.
What I found strange is that the mom must have gone back after moving the babies and covered the indentation where the four babies nestled — as if she were covering their tracks.
In a week, I’ll put out that "room for rent" sign and advertisement again.
http://njmg.typepad.com/owl/2007/08/1-rm-cf-view.html
2 comments
-
Good question. I have not seen the squirrel move the babies, so I am not sure. But that is my understanding — that she moves them like a cat moves her kittens… But these squirrel babies are getting big.
-
Maybe I haven’t been following this as closely as I should have but how does the squirrel move the babies? Like a cat by holding it in its mouth?






2 comments
jim wright
Good question. I have not seen the squirrel move the babies, so I am not sure. But that is my understanding — that she moves them like a cat moves her kittens… But these squirrel babies are getting big.
Pedro
Maybe I haven’t been following this as closely as I should have but how does the squirrel move the babies? Like a cat by holding it in its mouth?