Ermines are tough critters to get rid of, says Calgary woman - Action News
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Ermines are tough critters to get rid of, says Calgary woman

A Calgary woman is at her wits end trying to get rid of an animal that has made its way inside her home.

Kelly-Sue Chobotiuk has had no luck finding someone to remove a weasel from her home

Kelly-Sue Chobotiuk says she hasn't slept well in almost a week after spotting an ermine weasel in her basement. In the above picture she gives an idea of the animal's size. (CBC)

A Calgary woman is at her wits end trying to get rid of an ermine weasel she spotted in her basement in Falconridge.

Kelly-Sue Chobotiuk says she saw the long, white critter scurry across her window sill last Thursday. She doesn't know how the animal got into her home, but afew days latershe spotted some scat.

The ermine that broke into Kelly-Sue Chobotiuk's home looked a lot like the one above. (Fabio Bretto/Flickr Creative Commons)

"I was a little freaked out at first, because I couldn't believe thatIsaw something like that," she said.

Chobotiuk is worried about her pet rabbit because weasles are known to hunt them.

"When I talked to the wildlife peoplethey all said to me, 'Oh yeah, it will hunt and kill your rabbit,'" she said."So for the first few nights I slept in the living room with my rabbit."

But Chobotiukhasn't had any luck finding someone totrap it after calling the city's 311 line, the Calgary Humane Society and the wildlife hotline.

Kelly-Sue Chobotiuk said she is fearful that the ermine may be after her bunny. (CBC)

"So it'sbeen one call after the other and then people said,'Well, there are exterminators that will catch and release,'" she said. "I think I've phoned fiveand the sixth one I'm still waiting on.So they just keep passing the buck'phone this person, phone this person' and I keep hearing over and over we've never heard of that before."

Ken CheekwithCalgary Humane Wildlife Control agrees.

"This is the the first one I've ever heard of," he said. "It could have come in through an open window, a basement window ora door."

Chobotiuk says she's not even sure if the animal is still in her house. But if it is, she hopes to catch it in a trap and release it back into the wild.