Flying squirrel dives into photographer's home - Action News
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British Columbia

Flying squirrel dives into photographer's home

A flying squirrel went on an adventure through a Shuswap family's home.

I saw the fluffy tail on it and realized it wasnt a mouse

Photographer Selina Metcalfe snapped some photos of a curious flying squirrel that made its way through her home on Jan. 21. (Selina Metcalfe)

A flying squirrel got a tour of a B.C. family's home last weekend.

On Sunday, a Shuswap photographer felt uneasy when she saw a small creature moving about her home.

"I thought it was a mouse at first," said Selina Metcalfe, who lives in Canoe, B.C., a rural communitynine kilometres northeast of Salmon Arm.

"ThenI saw the fluffy tail on it and realized it wasn't a mouse."

It was a flying squirrel.

Though it only stayed for 20 minutes, this flying squirrel got a grand tour of a Shuswap photographer's home last weekend. (Selina Metcalfe)

Metcalfe said it likely came in through an open door, though it could have crawled in through her unfinished basement.

Though it was cute, Metcalfe knew she had to get it outside.

"I told my son to grab a sheet that we could throw over it."

But, that didn't work.

So, she and her son tried to lure it out using cashews. The flying squirrel didn't bite.

They tried rounding it up into a basket and "shooing" it out the door, but again to no avail.

"It was pretty calm and timid," she said. "It didn't seem like it was stressed at all. It was very inquisitive. It would come quite close to usand sit at my feet. It didn't seem overly scared."

Metcalfe was worried her two dogs would come into the house and get ahold of the small rodent and then it would all be over.

A curious squirrel

After touringthe kitchen, dining room, laundry room and evensome of Metcalfe's hanging dresses, the squirrelwas trapped on an enclosed porch, where it crawled into a side-table drawer.

From there, Metcalfe was able to move itoutside.

All this happened in about 20 minutes, Metcalfe said, and without damaging anything in the house.

"I'm not a fan of mice and I imagined at first that it would be similar to that, but it wasn't," she said. "It moved very differently from a mouse and it was calm and it almost seemed curious."

With files from Tara Copeland


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