Site last updated: Thursday, April 18, 2024

Log In

Reset Password
MENU
Butler County's great daily newspaper

PSU critters are nuts for Squirrel Girl

Penn State senior Mary Krupa plays with “Sneezy” the squirrel on Old Main Lawn in State College. Penn State students know her as the Squirrel Whisperer, or even Squirrel Girl. She has become an unlikely celebrity because of her efforts.
She is known all around

STATE COLLEGE — Penn State students know her as the Squirrel Whisperer, or even Squirrel Girl. Which suits Mary Krupa just fine.

Four years ago, the 22-year-old senior became an Internet sensation for placing tiny hats on the ubiquitous rodents that live near Penn State’s landmark Old Main building, and coaxing them to hold miniature props.

Her photographs of “Sneezy the Penn State Squirrel” continue to garner thousands of likes on Facebook and have been featured in magazines and calendars.

“It’s nice to make something and see that people like it. But I didn’t think it would last this long or become this popular,” said Krupa, who graduates this month.

She began interacting with Penn State’s famously friendly gray squirrels her first week on campus in 2012. Krupa idly wondered what one would look like with a hat on its head, and, pleased with the result, sent a photo to her grandmother, who loved it.

With Penn State reeling from the Jerry Sandusky sexual abuse scandal, Krupa decided students also could use a laugh.

“Everyone was really just down in the dumps, and I figured that Penn State needed something good to take their mind off things, cheer up. And so I started posting these pictures on Facebook.”

Krupa’s anthropomorphized Sneezy would become an unofficial mascot — Penn State’s very own Rocket J. Squirrel or Chip and Dale — and, over the course of her college career, the English major dreamed up many scenes for the squirrelly star.

There’s Sneezy pushing a tiny shopping cart filled with acorns. Sneezy holding a jack-o’-lantern at Halloween. Sneezy raking leaves and rooting for the home team, mostly while wearing an assortment of squirrel-size hats.

Krupa is an unlikely celebrity. Growing up in a wooded neighborhood outside State College, she had always been fond of the birds, squirrels and other wildlife around her house.

People were another matter.

Diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome, a milder form of autism, Krupa said she was a loner in high school, anti-social and awkward. Sneezy helped Krupa come out of her shell.

“The squirrel’s actually a good way to break the ice, because I’ll be sitting here patting a squirrel and other people will come over and we’ll just start like feeding the squirrels together and chatting about them,” she said. “I am a lot more outgoing.”

Even after she graduates, Krupa plans to stay in the area — ready to welcome the next class of Penn State squirrels.

“They’re definitely wild animals, and I always respect them for being wild animals,” said Krupa, who is minoring in wildlife science. “But at the same time, it’s neat that they’re willing to let me interact with them. We do seem to have this mutual trust.”

More in Community

Subscribe to our Daily Newsletter

* indicates required
TODAY'S PHOTOS