A small animal on a country walk
A small animal on a country walk
Author
Discussion

K87

Original Poster:

4,193 posts

124 months

Monday 22nd December 2025
quotequote all
This might be a big ask, identification without a pic but here goes.

I was on a coastal path in Lincolnshire with my dog, miles from any houses. A small animal walked between my dogs legs as we walked along and then through her front legs, not sure that she even noticed.

The animal was about the size and shape of a hamster, quite chubby but could move quickly. Chocolate brown back with white undersides.

I had thought perhaps a young stoat





But what I saw did not have the same proportions, much more like a hamster.

Any ideas?

okgo

41,726 posts

223 months

Monday 22nd December 2025
quotequote all
Young rabbit?

dxg

10,338 posts

285 months

Monday 22nd December 2025
quotequote all
Migrating haggis?

Can you tell us more about the surroundings? Vegetation - type and coverage, ground type, how coastal is coastal, rivers nearby, etc.?

Fastchas

2,814 posts

146 months

Monday 22nd December 2025
quotequote all
Prob a weasel. Smaller than stoats and it could've been a juvenile.

Easternlight

3,863 posts

169 months

Monday 22nd December 2025
quotequote all
Mole or Vole? But no white underside.
I don't think you'd ever get that close to a Stoat and they're like lightning quick.

Doofus

33,599 posts

198 months

Monday 22nd December 2025
quotequote all
Fastchas said:
Prob a weasel. Smaller than stoats and it could've been a juvenile.
Weasels are weasily identified. Stoats are stotally different.

K87

Original Poster:

4,193 posts

124 months

Monday 22nd December 2025
quotequote all
Thank you all for your suggestions.

It was the size that puzzled me, size of an adult hamster and broad in the beam, as it was moving away from me I didn't get a look at its face.

It didn't move like a rabbit, for the speed it was moving I would expect both rear legs to be moving together.

In terms of location we were walking along a man made mound that had become a foot path, perhaps a mile inland, no woodlands, no housing nearby either.

I would go with the idea of a stoat but the proportions were short and fat as opposed to long, thin and sinewy. I might be wrong but don't stoats arch their back when they run or walk quickly?

Castrol for a knave

7,372 posts

116 months

Monday 22nd December 2025
quotequote all

Juvenile mink can have a white underside.


Ambleton

7,210 posts

217 months

FourWheelDrift

92,038 posts

309 months

Monday 22nd December 2025
quotequote all

Catz

4,852 posts

236 months

Monday 22nd December 2025
quotequote all
Ambleton said:
Sounds like a vole. Maybe a bank vole as they’re darker brown in colour and white underneath. Voles don’t see very well which is possibly why it was wandering around under the dog’s legs.

K87

Original Poster:

4,193 posts

124 months

Monday 22nd December 2025
quotequote all
Catz said:
Ambleton said:
Sounds like a vole. Maybe a bank vole as they re darker brown in colour and white underneath. Voles don t see very well which is possibly why it was wandering around under the dog s legs.
A bank vole looks about the right size and shape and the I was in the right environment for a bank vole.


However the animal that I saw was a real dark chocolate and a fur that I would describe as velvety, perhaps a very young animal, the line between the brown upper and the white lower was really sharp.





I think it will remain a mystery.

Edited by K87 on Monday 22 December 14:33

Catz

4,852 posts

236 months

Monday 22nd December 2025
quotequote all
Water shrew?


dxg

10,338 posts

285 months

Tuesday 23rd December 2025
quotequote all
FourWheelDrift said:
Finally, AI has a purpose! smile

cliffords

3,854 posts

48 months

Tuesday 23rd December 2025
quotequote all
Hamster perhaps

thebraketester

15,606 posts

163 months

Tuesday 23rd December 2025
quotequote all
Glis glis?

K87

Original Poster:

4,193 posts

124 months

Tuesday 23rd December 2025
quotequote all
I have been looking through Google images and the only animal that comes close is a very young weasel.