The homeowner was soon on the phone with Belchertown Animal Control Officer Sarah Byrnes.
“The little baby was cold and wet from the rain storm we had [the night before],” Byrnes told The Dodo. “As soon as I saw him, my heart broke. He was drenched and looked so scared. He was definitely too young to be on his own.”
Byrnes filmed as she approached the baby raccoon, doing her best to assure him that everything would be OK.

After wrapping the wet raccoon in a towel and placing him inside a crate, Byrnes proceeded to check if his mother was nearby — but to no avail.
“I called the Leyden Center for Wildlife Rehabilitation for advice,” Byrnes said. “[Founder Amelie Dricut-Ziter] advised me to bring the baby to her.”

Fortunately, despite being lost, wet and hypothermic, the little raccoon appeared to be in otherwise good shape. He’s currently in quarantine, where Dricut-Ziter continues to monitor his health.
“He’s doing fine,” Dricut-Ziter told The Dodo. “He’s eating, drinking and being a raccoon.”
Estimated to be just over 2 months old, the raccoon is still too young to fend for himself in the wild. So, Dricut-Ziter plans to care for him until he’s able to be released.

When the time is right, the raccoon will join the nearly two dozen other baby raccoons being cared for at the Leyden Center for Wildlife Rehabilitation ahead of their eventual reintegration back into the wild.