5 tangled squirrels rescued by Winnipeg man - Action News
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Manitoba

5 tangled squirrels rescued by Winnipeg man

Wayne Komoski and his wife discovered a knot of five live squirrels in Charleswood on Sunday.

Wayne Komoski managed to coax squirrels into box, deliver them to veterinary hospital

Wayne Komoski and his wife discovered these five squirrels tangled in a single knot on Sunday. They brought them to the Pembina Veterinary Hospital where they were safely separated. (courtesy Wayne Komoski)

It was a "yapping" noise that first caught the attention of Wayne Komoski and his wife.

At first, the Charleswood couple thought they had stumbled upon a nest of baby squirrels,but when they looked closer, they realized what all the commotion was about.

"They were trying to get apart, and they couldn't," Komoski said.

All five baby grey squirrels were tangled by their tails at the base of a tree, and apiece of black garbage bag was tightly wrapped around their tails.

Komoski said he tried everything he could to safely separate the rodents without getting bitten.

"They were sort of like, wanting to nip you," he said.

Komoskifirst tried cutting the black plasticto free the rodents.

"You had to be careful where you put the scissors, that's how tight it was," said Komoski.

Then my wife got some cooking oil and tried to spray it on their tails so they would slide out, but it didn't work.- WayneKomoski

"Then my wife got some cooking oil and tried to spray it on their tails so they would slide out, but it didn't work."

Komoski then decided to bring the animals to an expert.

Using a towel, hemanaged to trap the five squirrels in a box. He then delivered the animals to the Pembina Veterinary Hospital, where they wereseparated.

All five are now in the care of the Prairie Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre where they are being fed and monitored, said the organization's presidentLisa Tretiak.

The squirrels likely got tangled while they were growing up in the nest, she said.

The five squirrels will remain at rehabilitation centrefor the next coupleof weeks to ensure their tails are not permanently damaged.

"We have to see how the blood flow is going to go through the tail,"saidTretiak.

Grey squirrels cannot survive without their tails as the rodents use them for balance and for warmth in the winter, said Tretiak.

If they are healthy, all the animals will be released back into the wild.