

Nasty weather. Play rehearsals. Too much to do. Enjoy these wonderful photos.
Life with a hedgehog? What could be better? Well here's the catch, as with anything worthwhile in life there are ups and downs being a hedgie owner, but in the end it is completely worth it. This blog was created to share my thoughts, joys, and frustration with keeping one of these prickly pets.
A day or two ago the temperature was finally warm enough to take Phinneus outside to stretch his legs. I don't know if hedgehogs get cabin fever, but I felt bad that he had been cooped up all winter. I gathered him and my camera and headed for a sunny patch of skilla. I placed him in amongst the flowers and it was as if he had completely forgotten that outside existed! He sniffed every inch of greenery in front of him and then stuck his little snout high in the air to sniff the breeze. He even tried to munch on one of the little blue flowers; it must have been the first bit of plant life he has tasted since he was a tiny hoglet. After a while he began to look worried and lost so I caught his attention by rustling my foot in plants so he could find it. The little critter rushed right over to plop himself on my foot and reassure himself that he was not in iminent danger. After this I scooped him up and brought him over to the grass so he could scoot around. Of course, he version of this was to huddle under his fleece blankie and sniff at months old rabbit pellets. Happy spring! For more than twenty years, Hugh Warwick has tracked hedgehogs across the globe in the slim hopes of coming across the hedgehog’s tiny, but unmistakable, pawprints. Warwick isn’t alone in his endeavors. In England and Wales, the Environment Agency, Great Britain’s leading environmental group, recently selected the hedgehog as its new mascot; while in America, which lacks a native hedgehog species, fanciers flock to the biannual Mile High Hedgehog Show to celebrate en masse the little spiny urchin. But why does the hedgehog seem to have such universal appeal?"

