Post office staff called on the team from Natural Resources Yorke and
North to arrange a return of the tiny possum to its home, about 90 kilometers from Minlaton.
Deborah Furbank from Natural Resources said many rural properties used
empty drums as their mailboxes and these proved to be popular napping
spots for native animals.
"The possum was fine, it was very frisky and very curious when we looked
in the bag," she said.
"We gave it flowers with nectar so it had food to eat." Ms Furbank said it was important to release the possum back to where it had traveled from. "They are territorial so it was really good that the post office kept the details of which bag it had arrived in so we knew where to let it go," she said. "It traveled over 200 kilometers by the time we got it back to its original destination. It must have got picked up in the morning and was replaced the following morning, so it must have been about 24 hours.
"It was a big day for a little possum." Another member of the Natural Resources team, Cath Cameron, was due to travel from Minlaton to Foul Bay so got the extra job of chauffeuring the pygmy possum home. "It was a classic case of return-to-sender," she said. "When I dropped it back near the mailbox it hopped off my hand and scampered into nearby bush without even a wave."
"We gave it flowers with nectar so it had food to eat." Ms Furbank said it was important to release the possum back to where it had traveled from. "They are territorial so it was really good that the post office kept the details of which bag it had arrived in so we knew where to let it go," she said. "It traveled over 200 kilometers by the time we got it back to its original destination. It must have got picked up in the morning and was replaced the following morning, so it must have been about 24 hours.
"It was a big day for a little possum." Another member of the Natural Resources team, Cath Cameron, was due to travel from Minlaton to Foul Bay so got the extra job of chauffeuring the pygmy possum home. "It was a classic case of return-to-sender," she said. "When I dropped it back near the mailbox it hopped off my hand and scampered into nearby bush without even a wave."
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