Unfortunately many of these baby squirrels fall out of nests, lose their mothers or become homeless due to tree trimmers. If you've found a baby or juvenile squirrel and need help or advice, I can help THERE ARE NO FEES. I have successfully rehabbed and released over a dozen squirrels in the last eight years. If you've found a baby or injured squirrel, do not feed it . Carefully(with rubber gloves) place it in a small cardboard box with fleece bedding and keep it warm in the meantime. Make sure there is only dim lighting and in a quiet noiseless area to keep the animal calm. You can provide some water to hydrate it via eye dropper or nipple syringe. You can contact a wildlife rescue/rehab facility, but chances are they are already overwhelmed and under-staffed. They are primarily staffed with public volunteers, and sadly resort to premature euthanizing, when they have lack of resources. They will usually not provide the founder feedback on the outcome of the squirrel you brought to them. If I cannot help, I have contact with a network of licensed private folks who specialize in squirrel rehabilitation, and have all the necessary equipment, medication, and veterinarian access to save the animal's life. Thank you for caring......