Izzy Mask LOGO.jpgThe
National
Ferret
School

Cable Laying

Our Service

Our team – humans and ferrets – have vast experience of working on construction sites and farms, threading cables and draw ropes, as well as locating blockages in underground drains.

We can use our ferrets to thread cables underground, through pipes and conduits, behind false ceilings, through wall cavities and in many other situations.

We regularly use our ferrets, working with electricians, to thread cables under floorboards, through wall cavities and above false ceilings.

Our Ferrets

We have over 50 ferrets (technically known as a business – the collective noun for ferrets) of different sizes, allowing us to always have several ferrets suitable and available for every job, without over-working the animals.  All our ferrets are skilled at their job, and can easily and quickly pass along pipes, ducts and drains as small as 75mm in diameter.

 

The Work

It is not always easy to thread cables and wires using rods, especially where the conduit snakes its way underground, over false ceilings or through wall cavities, and it is not uncommon for companies to have use expensive plant (e.g. diggers etc.) to accomplish this.  

Missing or broken draw ropes can also cause major headaches for contractors, and need to be maintained or replaced.

Our ferrets, under the direct supervision of trained and highly experienced technicians, can help thread cables without incurring high costs.

When threading cables, we fit a harness on the ferret, and attach a strong but very lightweight nylon line to the harness.  The nylon line is on a heavy duty reel, ensuring it does not snag nor get too loose, thus impeding the ferret’s progress.

The ferret is put in one end of the conduit/pipe and encouraged from the other end.  As the animal makes its way along the conduit, it drags the light line.

Once the ferret has threaded the light line, it is attached to a stronger, heavier pull rope which is used to thread the cable etc.

 

Safeguards

Our ferrets are extremely important to us, and we place the welfare of the animals above the needs of the company.

All our technicians work to a strict Code of Practice  which ensures the wellbeing of the ferret at all times.

We are fully insured, and supply all clients with comprehensive risk assessments and method statements (RAMS) before any work is conducted.

With highly experienced and trained technicians helping the ferrets, clients are assured of an extremely professional service.

 

Historical References

Nuclear Ferret

Feliciathe ferret in a Particle Accelerator.jpgIn September 1971, scientists at the United States National Accelerator Laboratory (NAL), operated by Stanford University at a site in Menlo Park, California, needed to clean microscopic steel particles, known as mesons, from long tubes in a particle accelerator, used for experiments in electron acceleration.  At the time, this was the largest machine in the world, with a 6.5 kilometre (four-mile) long main vacuum tube.  The mesons were preventing the particle accelerator from functioning, and the laboratory needed an effective “pipe cleaner”.  

The accelerator was made from 92 metre (300 foot) long, individual pipes, which had to be spotlessly clean for the particle accelerator to work; any imperfections or dirt would interrupt the powerful beam of energy as it was fired through the tubes.

Felicia_pic2b.jpgRobert Sheldon, a British scientist on loan to the NAL, came up with the idea of using a ferret to clean up the mesons (subatomic particles which are intermediate in mass between an electron and a proton, and transmit the strong interaction that binds nucleons together in the atomic nucleus).

Sheldon had witnessed ferrets being used by gamekeepers in England, who sent them into burrows to chase rabbits from warrens.

Enter Felicia the ferret.

Felicia was fitted with a collar to which was attached a string which she pulled through the pipe.  To the end of this string was fastened a swab which was pulled through the pipe to clean it.

Ferret Electrician

Freddie was a ferret used by electricians to thread wiring and cable in Auckland, New Zealand.

Freddie was very good at his job, and on one morning is recorded as laying cables through 60 different pipes, the longest of which was 40 metres (130 feet).

His prowess, however, was not appreciated by the country’s Electrical Workers’ Union, who insisted that Freddie could not continue his work unless he became a member of the Union.  As far as we know, Freddie is the only mustelid in the world to hold a valid union membership.

Royal Ferrets

Charles & Di Wedding.jpgIn July, 1981, the BBC employed a team of ferrets to help thread TV cables under the floors of St. Paul’s Cathedral, in London, England, for coverage of the wedding of HRH Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer.

The cables had to be fed through very narrow underground ducts under the cathedral, and although conventional methods had been tried, these had failed.  The ferrets, however, were successful, and engineers were able to attach TV cables to lines threaded by the ferrets, and pull the cables through the ducting.

Broadband Ferrets

On 1st April, 2010, Virgin Media pulled off a great April Fool joke, by issuing a press release claiming that the company had been using ferrets to lay broadband cables in rural areas of the UK.

Transcontinental Ferrets

Pipeline.jpgDuring the laying of oil and gas pipes across the American continent in the second half of the 20th Century, ferrets were used to haul light lines through the pipes being laid across the North American continent.  Once these lines were through, heavier lines were hauled through on them, and trolley-mounted cameras were dragged through, allowing the engineers to inspect the welds.  

At the end of long, hard days, the men working on the pipeline would relax by racing ferrets through sections of pipe, taking bets on which one would emerge first – this led to the creation of the now extremely popular ferret racing.

Military Ferrets

ImArmy Ferret.jpgphal and Quebec are two ferrets which serve as members of the British Army’s 20th Armoured Brigade, as part of the 1st Battalion The Yorkshire Regiment.  The tradition of adopting ferrets into the Brigade started in World War 1, when ferrets were originally used to hunt rabbits to feed the hungry soldiers.  These honorary members of the Regiment hold pet passports, allowing them to participate in parades and other ceremonies around the world.

Cold War Ferret

peterson air force base.jpgWhen wires had to be threaded through 12 metre (40 feet) long pipes at the Peterson US Air Force base in Colorado, as part of the United States’ early warning and missile system, the USAF employed the services of Misty the ferret.  Misty was rewarded with pieces of “Pop Tart” as treats for her hard work.

Millennium Ferrets

Millennium Dome.jpgHeld in Greenwich, England, on Millennium Eve, a concert featuring Simply Red, The Eurythmics, Bryan Ferry and the London Symphony Orchestra, almost didn’t go ahead due to difficulties in threading broadcast and electrical cables around the site.  Fearing a huge bill and poor quality TV coverage for the event, the organisers called in Beckham, Posh and Baby, three ferrets named after The Spice Girls.

Once the ferrets had completed their work, the concert went ahead and was viewed by millions around the globe.

High Flying Ferrets

boeing-747-400.jpgIn the 1960s, Boeing, the American aircraft manufacturers, used ferrets to carry cables to inaccessible areas of the aircraft’s fuselage and wing structure