Rat Rodeo! New Hampshire Shelter Receives Influx of Critters

Adoption event comes after surrender of hundreds of mice and rats

The New Hampshire SPCA found itself with more than 850 mice and rats in its care last month. It's hoping to find homes for the remaining rodents this weekend
The New Hampshire SPCA found itself with more than 850 mice and rats in its care last month. It’s hoping to find homes for the remaining rodents this weekend
Todd Bookman/NHPR
Share
The New Hampshire SPCA found itself with more than 850 mice and rats in its care last month. It's hoping to find homes for the remaining rodents this weekend
The New Hampshire SPCA found itself with more than 850 mice and rats in its care last month. It’s hoping to find homes for the remaining rodents this weekend
Todd Bookman/NHPR
Rat Rodeo! New Hampshire Shelter Receives Influx of Critters
Copy

“Welcome to Mouse-land!” exclaims Lisa Dennison, executive director of the New Hampshire SPCA in Stratham, as she swings open a door.

The room is filled wall-to-wall with glass tanks, each holding mice and African soft fur rats, a handsome little species. It’s one of three areas within the shelter recently modified to handle an unexpected influx: Last month, a local resident walked into the shelter looking to surrender what was initially described as about 150 rodents.

“Turned out to be over 850,” said Dennison. “And it’s been just an enormous undertaking.”

Each animal had to be cataloged and named and provided with a tank and bedding. Adult females were observed for potential pregnancies, while males needed to be neutered. (Mice beget mice rather quickly — gestation is around 21 days.) The staff, meanwhile, still needed to tend to its usual stable of cats, dogs, rabbits, and horses.

Shelters across New England quickly stepped up to take on some of the rodents, while others have already been adopted.

This weekend, the shelter is hoping to find forever homes for the remaining 250 or so animals.

All adoption fees are waived, and the shelter is throwing in free tanks, bedding, some starter food and even a wheel.

“They are adorable. They really are,” says Dennison. “They make great little pets.”

Morgan Pritchett is a former rat owner who swung by the shelter Friday just to look around but wound up leaving with four new friends.

“They are like mini dogs. Like, seriously,” she says.

One concern for the shelter, initially, is that people with questionable motives may come and adopt: Snake owners.

“That is really not what we’re looking for,” says Dennison. “It really is not.”

These are pets, not snacks, she says.

And for those rodents who don’t find a home this weekend, the shelter will continue to care for them.

“Our commitment to these mice is the same as it would be to our guinea pigs or our gerbils, our birds, our rabbits,” she says. “Our vision is always a safe and loving home for all animals.”

This story was originally published by NHPR. It was shared as part of the New England News Collaborative.

Bishop Bruce Lewandowski led prayers outside the facility that houses some ICE detainees in part to protest the recent killing of Renee Good in Minneapolis
Complaints pile up as R.I. Department of Administration rolls out new payroll system after six years of planning
More than 7,250 overtime hours were logged between Dec.13 and Dec. 23 by city police
An expert commission recommends that the state take on hundreds of millions of dollars in costs currently borne by local school districts
Budget uncertainty, high-profile elections and fallout from DC are top of mind as Rhode Island zips into 2026
The new four-part docuseries produced in partnership with Ocean State Media was inspired by a spontaneous Rhode Island snorkeling experience by filmmaker Tomas Koeck