toronto squirrel

Squirrel caught in six-pack ring perfectly illustrates Toronto's trash problem

From the makers of Toronto's own meat cape pigeon and peanut butter jar head raccoon comes a new urban critter unwittingly dressed up in human refuse: The six pack ring squirrel.

By "makers," of course, I'm referring to us, the humans. We're the ones who produce and consume all of the plastic garbage our animal friends end up wearing or being killed by in record numbers.

We're also the ones with the power to stop it — or, at the very least, to cut our damn six pack rings before tossing them into the trash (yes, the trash. Plastic rings aren't recyclable in Toronto).

Toronto six pack squirrelToronto resident Branden Bratuhin spotted the cute yet unfortunate six pack ring squirrel seen above on Monday afternoon near his home in The Annex.

"It slowed as I approached — wishful thinking on my part that it would somehow let me help it — but it then ran up a tree," he said of the squirrel. "I spotted it again the same day around 6 p.m. around the corner."

Three hours later, and the squirrel was still trapped in its dirty plastic harness. 

toronto squirrelIn an effort to encourage people to cut their six pack rings (or better yet, to use an eco-friendly alternative), Bratuhin shared images of the tiny distressed mammal.

"PSA: cutting your beverage six pack rings before tossing in the trash isn't just to prevent aquatic wildlife getting stuck. It also can affect furry friends who happen to dumpster dive," he wrote on Twitter

Sadly, he was unable to catch and help the squirrel himself, but is asking Annex residents to "keep an eye out for this little fella."

The squirrel was last seen near Bathurst and Wells. Should you find out where it lives, Toronto Wildlife Services will be able to advise you on what to do.

Photos by

Braden Bratuhin


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in City

Stunning new Toronto transit station will link several TTC and GO lines

Toronto Public Library website crashes over demand for free CN Tower passes

Ontario auto theft claims have jumped 524% and now surpass $1B

Rapid-breeding invasive fish species spotted in Ontario and you should kill them on sight

Toronto Shoppers Drug Mart ad for unpaid volunteer position has people baffled

Toronto was just ranked among the best cities in the world for culture lovers

Here are the rules for setting off your own fireworks in Toronto on Victoria Day

Here's everything you need to know about Ontario's only native lizard species