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One stone skunk being helped to overcome bacon butty addiction

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Published Date: 29 September 2009
AN obese skunk has been put on a strict diet to help wean him off his addiction to bacon sandwiches.
The mammal, named Mr Bumble, was given to the RSPCA by his previous owners when he became too much of a handful.

He now lives at Tropiquaria animal park near Watchet, Somerset where
he is being put through a dietary regime involving long walks,
vegetables and fruit.

Mr Bumble weighed one stone when he arrived at the centre, around double his ideal weight.

Park owner Chris Noisier told the BBC: "We're now working on dieting him down to what he should be and clearly bacon butties are not a normal part of a skunk's diet in the wild.

"We're putting him on the vegetarian option at the moment. It's very much like a human weight watching issue.

"He is getting to meet lots of new people so there's lots going on in his life and I suspect it's making up for the lack of his old favourite food."

A skunk's natural diet in the wild features carrion, insects, mice and a range of greenery.

Native to North America, the creatures have become popular as house pets in the UK.

But increasingly they are being found abandoned after a law was
passed preventing the removal of their scent glands.

Vets' examinations have been unable to determine whether this happened to Mr Bumble.

Mr Bumble, the skunk, weighs around one stone





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1

uzuzaP,

29/09/2009 12:04:59
That is the strangest looking skunk I have seen. Normally it's green, sticky and stinky.

Ahem.
2

Miss Pixie,

formerly of Dinleyhaughfoot Cottage, Roxburghshire 29/09/2009 12:34:31
As long as a skunk does not feel threatened getting "skunked" won't be a problem. They only resort to spraying as a last resort when their warnings go unheeded. They are truely "sharpshooters".
3

retiredscot,

Edinburgh at Heart 30/09/2009 23:04:59
Why is it illegal to remove their scent gland? Tom Cats are neutered for basically a similar reason----so they won't spray. If Skunk is an inside pet, what's the reasoning. Daft UK rules, glad I left sorry for the ones left over there.
4

Ileach,

30/09/2009 23:15:42
When my German Shepherd dog was wee, he liked to chase cats in the park. He did encounter a black-and-white cat that suddenly got tired of being chased, and skunked him but good! It took two weeks before the smell had left my house. The poor dog was a pariah throughout and complained bitterly after the fourth grooming session. However, when he now encounters this strange cat in the park, he won't go near it! I wish someone had remembered to have that "kitty's" scent gland removed.
5

Gordon Smiths 364,

Edinburgh 01/10/2009 08:03:48
If the vets cant tell if the scent gland is removed or not, one sure way of testing would be, give it a bacon butty, creep up behind it and shout boo! as you steal the fore mentioned butty! It works with people from Fife! but then again they smell pretty bad anyway!

 

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