The saga of Scoop, the Toronto Star raccoon that captured the hearts and minds of Torontonians (and even got herself a Twitter page) continues.

Last time you saw her, she was in a firefighter’s net, but on Friday, the Toronto Wildlife Centre posted a YouTube video with an update.

Text on the screen says Scoop is resting in their care, and that veterinary and rehabilitation staff are investigating why she ended up stuck on a ledge at One Yonge St. and couldn’t get herself down.

The footage shows the baby raccoon being cared for by Wildlife Centre staff. The text on the screen explains that she gets daily attention for her minor paw injuries. In the video, Scoop is released into her cage and is seen slowly climbing the enclosure.

Toronto Wildlife Centre executive director Nathalie Karvonen said Scoop was likely malnourished before she ended up on the ledge.

“Even if she had been on that ledge for a week, which she wasn’t, she wouldn’t have been as thin as she is,” Karvonen said. Scoop should have been “pretty chunky, because it’s going into fall,” she said in an interview on Oct. 14.

Raccoons are good climbers and can even climb on brick, so the textured exterior of the building should have been easy for her to manage. The Toronto Wildlife Centre hoped she would be able to find her own way down, which is why her rescue was delayed several days.

Karvonen says wild animals don’t like being inside and get scared because they don’t know people are trying to help them, which is why they want to release Scoop as soon as possible.

The Toronto Wildlife Centre did not immediately respond to requests for an interview. It is unknown when Scoop will be released.

With files from Sophie van Bastelaer and Brennan Doherty.