The endangered siblings currently live in a small pumpkin which acts as both a secure nest and a tasty snack. When Hansel and Gretel arrived at the centre, the rescue workers set about feeding the dormice every hour for several days. Senior clinical assistant Caragh Hunter said: "We use a tiny paintbrush dipped in formula milk.
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"They gradually worked up to taking about 10 drops each meal and soon began lapping from an up-turned plastic milk bottle top. Now they are eating solids like berries and nuts." When they arrive at Paignton they will join a breeding programme designed to increase numbers of hazel dormice before being released into the wild.
Ms Hunter said: "There are very few of them around in Britain but we are lucky to have a few small communities around us in the south of England." Dormice can spend up to three quarters of their life asleep. They hibernate when food is scarce to conserve energy. In Britain, they are mainly found in the southern counties, although they are present in a few scattered locations in the Lake District and mid-Wales.
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