Found abandoned on the roadside is it a rare British polecat or just a feral ferret?
Would you like to appear on our site? We offer sponsored articles and advertising to put you in front of our readers. Find out moreNick Millman has worked ferrets for many years, so when he found an abandoned 8-10-week old mustelid in the country lane near his home in East Devon he knew immediately it was no ordinary domesticated hob and wondered if he had stumbled across a genuine wild polecat.
To begin with it had dark colouring like a polecat as opposed to the white of working ferrets bred into them to make them more visible, but this was not evidence enough as there are darker domesticated ferrets. More importantly, its behaviour resembled that of a wild animal, highly aggressive especially in close confinement. Nick decided to take the creature home to see if he could tame it. Three months later despite regular hand-feeding and close contact with humans Begbie is as “wild” as the day he arrived. I witnessed him biting Nick no less than three times in rapid succession when he took him out of his enclosure, drawing blood on each occasion.
Unfortunately, ferrets are genetically identical to our native polecat so even a DNA test could not provide an answer. So the question remains. Could Begbie just be an escaped ferret with a particularly violent disposition? Could he be a member of a feral family of ferrets which escaped several generations ago and returned to a wild state? Or is he part of a genuine British wild polecat population trapped to near extinction in England but perhaps making a comeback. If readers have any theories as to Begbie’s origins or have come across similar animals we would be delighted to hear from you.
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