Raccoonhound? Orphaned Raccoon Becomes BFFs with Dogs

Please don’t tell Pumpkin she’s not a dog.

The 1-year-old raccoon was rescued as a baby when she fell from a tree in Rosie Kemp’s Nassau, Bahamas, backyard.

Kemp and her daughter, Laura Young, waited for the raccoon’s mother to show up, but when that didn’t happen, they contacted the Bahamas Humane Society. The shelter couldn’t take the raccoon.

“So, with the guidance of friends who have had experience with raccoons, we cared for her,” Young told CBS News. They named her Pumpkin, and had her treated for a leg she broke in the fall, fed her every few hours and kept her warm.

As long as they are kept up-to-date on rabies vaccinations, raccoons are allowed as pets in the Bahamas. Young said if the baby raccoon hadn’t fallen from the tree, she would never consider having one as a pet.

“Raccoons are NOT pets,” Young told The Dodo. “They are wild animals, so they are quite moody. Unlike dogs and cats, they are not domesticated. Like a spoiled child, if she doesn’t get her way, she will let you know.”

Young said she and her mom intend to give Pumpkin the best life possible.

But it seems like a challenge to that best life would be two other rescued pets of Kemp and Young: dogs Toffee and Oreo. Could a raccoon actually live happily ever after in a house with two predators?

Amazingly, yes. Apparently the dogs think Pumpkin is a dog — and Pumpkin thinks she is a dog.

“Pumpkin considers the dogs her mums,” Young told CBS News. “She respects them when they have had enough rough play and she loves to cuddle next to them when she is tired.”

An Instagram account with lots of adorable photos of Pumpkin and her two besties currently has more than 134,000 followers.

“She is so wonderful and highly intelligent and always very entertaining,” Young told CBS News. “She is a cheeky little thing, but we love her dearly.”

Hero Pit Bull Quarantined after Saving Girl from Rabid Raccoon

Eleven-year-old Savannah Vanase was cleaning the chicken coop in her family’s Norwich, Conn., backyard earlier this month when she was approached by a raccoon.

The family’s Pit Bull, 21-month-old Tank, saw the raccoon, which was just inches away from Vanase.

“All of a sudden my dog comes barking and sprinting under [the coop], and I look under, and there’s this huge raccoon,” Vanase told WTIC-TV. “I just didn’t know what to do. I just stood right here.”

She said she was surprised to see her mild-mannered snuggle buddy turn into “Super Puppy.”

“They were just tussling, and the raccoon went on his back and scratched him on his face, and Tank kept trying to pounce on him,” Vanase said.

Tank killed the raccoon, which later tested positive for rabies.

Unfortunately, Tank’s heroic act has the possibility of ending in an “Old Yeller” type tragedy for the pup. His rabies booster shot was a few days overdue. If he was infected, he will have to be euthanized.

Tank must be quarantined at a local animal shelter for six months to see if he develops symptoms of rabies. Animal control officer Donna Gremminger told KTRK that if Tank’s vaccinations had been up to date, he would have required a 45-day home quarantine.

“We’re trying to avoid [euthanization] and give him his fair chance,” Savannah’s dad, Chris Vanase, told WTIC-TV. “It’s the least I could do for saving my daughter.”

Gremminger said Tank has so far shown no signs of rabies, and said that none of the dogs she has seen quarantined in the shelter have turned out to be infected.

The six members of the Vanase family must also undergo a series of treatments for rabies.

“When he comes home, (I’m going to) make him a big, nice, peanut-butter-bone-treat cake and hug him as hard as I can,” Samantha told KTRK.

Hopefully Tank’s story will have a happier ending than “Old Yeller.” And hopefully Tank’s family will make sure his vaccinations are up to date for the rest of this hero’s life.

Photo via Facebook

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