02/14/2026
SHE IS DEAD. THEY ARE NOT. 🚗🐀
It is Pouch Season (Late Feb - March). You see an Opossum hit by a car on the side of the road. You keep driving. "It's too late," you think.
Turn around.
The Opossum is North America's only Marsupial. That means the mother is just a vehicle; the babies are passengers in a safe, warm "External Womb." The mother can be gone, but the 13 babies inside her pouch are often perfectly healthy, waiting to be saved.
Here is the science of "The Pouch Check":
1. The Survival Capsule 🛡️ Opossum babies are born the size of a honeybee. They live inside the pouch for months. The pouch is insulated, fur-lined, and tough. It acts like a crash helmet and an incubator. Babies can survive for hours inside a deceased mother.
2. The "Ni**le Lock" (DO NOT PULL) ⚠️ This is the most important rule. When a baby opossum latches on, the ni**le swells inside its mouth to keep it from falling out. They are physically locked on. If you try to pull them out, you will rip their mouths open and kill them. The Protocol:
Move the mother’s body to safety (wear gloves!).
Check the belly. If you feel lumps or see movement in the pouch...
Do not remove the babies.
Put the whole mother in a box or towel.
Drive to a Wildlife Rehabber. Let them surgically detach the babies.
3. The "Pink" Check 🕵️♀️ If the babies are pink and moving, they are alive. If they are grey and cold, it has been too long. But in February, the cold air preserves the babies longer than in summer. It is always worth a look.
One stop can save 13 lives.
📌 Quick FAQ
Q: Won't she bite me? A: Make sure she is dead. ☠️ Poke the rear leg with a stick first. If there is no reflex, she is gone. Opossums "play dead" (catatonia) when scared, but a road-hit animal usually shows other signs of trauma.
Q: Is it illegal to transport them? A: Technically, maybe. 🚓 In some states, transporting wildlife is restricted. However, if you are driving directly to a licensed rehabber or vet, you are usually covered under "Good Samaritan" protocols. Call the rehabber first; they will tell you what to do.
Q: Can I raise them? A: No. 🚫 Baby opossums require a specialized tube-feeding diet (their stomachs are tiny). Cow's milk kills them. They also suffer from Metabolic Bone Disease (rickets) if they don't get massive amounts of calcium. They need a pro.