Monday, June 4, 2018

Animal House


Suburbia is reputed to be the Land of the Automobile, the Land of the Strip Mall and the Land of the McMansion, and there is a good deal of truth to all of those appellations.  It must be noted, however, that Nature was here long before the Interstate Highway System came through and Target Stores set up shop, and she hasn't surrendered yet to the inexorable march of human civilization and the construction industry.

The neighborhood where my family lives is green with lawns, bushes and mature trees, with bands of forest land, streams, ponds and little corners of marshland here and there, and it turns out that all of that is conducive to the flourishing of wildlife.  Anyone sitting in our family room at the right time of morning or evening can glance out the window into our backyard and see squirrels, robins, the occasional rabbit, and the very occasional opossum.  This is also the time of year for cardinals (of the avian, not Roman variety).   A few times, for reasons we can't explain, ducks have waddled past.  Twice I've seen deer walking through the yard, and coyotes are known to trot by.  If our windows are open and the television is off, the chattering and piping of songbirds provides a soundtrack, especially in the early morning.

Some local species don't seem to be doing that well: when we moved into the area in the 1990s, there were large flocks of crows living in the area, but I haven't heard a crow cawing for some years - I'm given to understand that their numbers have been greatly reduced by some form of avian illness.  But some species are thriving so well in suburbia that they've become nuisances.  Coyotes are among them.  So are Canada geese.  And so are skunks - for whatever reason, their numbers have been multiplying in recent years.

We humans live under the delusion that we've signed some sort of treaty with the other animal species, the understanding being that we own the Inside and they own the Outside, at least when we're not using it.  But the other species have a different understanding of how this works: to their way of thinking, all of these structures we've built, like houses, garages and garden sheds, are forms of Terrain, and are fair game for doing the species thing, which turns out to be pretty similar to what has drawn humans to suburbia: building a home and reproducing.

In the thirty years or so we've been in this house, the animal kingdom has made three major encroachments into our domicile.  The first assault was from the air.  We were first made aware of it one weekday morning when a sparrow managed to wriggle through the space between the door of our furnace room and the floor, and popped out into our family room.  At the time, we owned a cat who was an enthusiastic if ineffective hunter.  One of his favorite resting places (all cats have at least 20 or 30 such spots throughout a house) was atop a tall bookcase that is located right next to the furnace room entrance.  Imagine his surprise that morning when a bird suddenly appeared seven feet below where he was settling down for his morning nap.  I wasn't present to witness what transpired, but my wife reports that it was a real-life version of Sylvester and Tweetie, with the bird zipping all over the room and the cat in hot pursuit.  My wife was able to get the patio door open, and the bird made its escape.

In the aftermath of that incident, reflecting on the phenomenon of a bird coming out of our furnace room, we thought that didn't seem right.  We asked some neighbors, who agreed with us, and advised us to get our furnace checked out.  The upshot was that there was no cap on our chimney, and a family of sparrows (or starlings or some such) had built a nest down the chimney.  The bird in question had somehow made it through the duct system into the furnace room.  The furnace guy cleaned out the furnace (seems we were fortunate; the nest could have blocked the furnace exhaust and killed us all in our sleep) and referred us to a guy who capped the chimney with some fencing similar to chicken wire.

The next incursion also was from above.  The outer part of the house that includes the family room has a gable vent at the peak of the roof, which consisted of slats of wood.  Somehow a raccoon or similar critter managed to scratch or chew its way through, and took up residence in our attic.  We could hear it walking above us; and we could also hear something running around with little pitters and patters, which we were pretty sure were squirrels.  Once again, we consulted neighbors, who advised us to call a Raccoon Service.  I was previously unaware of the existence of such a service, but I consulted Google and Yelp, and came up with a humane service that had the requisite number of stars.  They sent a guy out with a cage trap, a ladder and a jar of smoked fish paste.  He baited the trap with the paste, and set it on the roof near the gable vent.  He advised us to take a look at the trap each morning, and call him if we saw anything.  That very night, the trap caught a raccoon.  It was enormous: it barely fit inside the trap.  We called the guy, he came out and took the cage with him.

This is the first point, in this series of incidents between man and beast, at which I felt a few faint pricks of conscience.  As I gazed at the roof, the animal struggled a little bit to try to get itself out of the cage.  It wasn't much of a struggle; it looked exhausted.  I don't know how long it had been in the trap, but my interpretation of the incident was that it had been trying for hours to get itself out and was just about spent.

So when the Raccoon Service guy came out to retrieve the trap, I asked him if "humane" meant that he would do a live release somewhere - hopefully, far away from our house.  He chuckled at my squeamishness and naivete.  No, getting itself trapped spelled the permanent end of Mr. Raccoon's criminal career, but he assured me that it would be ushered off to Raccoon Heaven in a way that wouldn't cause it any pain.  Then the guy repaired the vent.  Honestly, it doesn't look great - it's covered with chicken wire - but it's done the job: we haven't had an attic issue since then.

Our most recent issue was from below.  A couple of weeks ago, my son and I noticed a skunk waddling away from the house through the backyard, heading for a large bird feeder on the property of the neighbor whose back yard abuts ours.  The feeder serves as the local restaurant and pick-up joint for the neighborhood fauna.  "Huh, that's kind of interesting" we thought when we saw the skunk, and then we turned our attention back to our ballgame.  However, a couple of days later, the neighbor let my wife know that he had seen a skunk actually emerging from beneath our house.  My wife did a walk-around inspection, and found the spot - right beneath our bedroom window - where the skunk seemed to have burrowed a little home for itself.

We were worried that it might find, or create, a path into our crawl space.  So we called the Raccoon Service, which, it turns out, also is a Skunk Service.  The guy basically followed the same procedure with traps and bait as with the raccoon, except this time the trap was set on the ground near the burrow.  Nothing was captured the first night, but the second night it caught a skunk.  Possibly the service had recorded some customer-service notes regarding my squeamishness from the raccoon episode, because the guy took pains to let me know that, in Illinois, state law requires that all captured skunks be killed, as it's the species that is the most common carrier of rabies.  So that was the end of the line for Mr. Skunk - or, as I now suspect, Mrs. Skunk.

Apparently, catching a single skunk doesn't necessarily signify the end of the infestation problem, so when the guy took the captured skunk away, he set a new trap, and put what he described as a permeable barrier - basically, a layer of dirt and gravel - over the burrow entrance.  The idea was that, if there were any more skunks in the burrow, they'd dig through the barrier, and that would provide visual evidence that any new capture also had come from under the house.  The guy also scheduled some repair work - more chicken wire, I fear - but they wouldn't be able to do the work for a week or so.  Between the date of that initial skunk capture and the date of the repair work, he'd try to trap any other skunks that emerged.

The next night, the trap caught an opossum.  The permeable barrier was still intact, meaning that the opossum hadn't come from under the house, so I suggested to the guy that he could do a live release, but he said he couldn't.  He took away the opossum and set yet another trap.

The next night, we caught another skunk, and this time the permeable barrier had been breached.  This one was a juvenile - so small that the guy from the service assured me that its "squirt ability" hadn't developed yet.  He cooed and squealed over it like a little girl with a new puppy - which I thought was kind of an interesting exercise in compartmentalization, inasmuch as he was required by state law to dispatch it shortly.  Once again, he set a new trap and reset the barrier.

That was yesterday morning.  Later that same afternoon, we saw another juvenile skunk wandering around in the backyard.  By this point, my wife and kids were getting really upset at the notion that our family was cooperating in the deaths of baby animals.  Their anxiety was further heightened when my wife checked the trap and noted that it had already caught, not one, but two more juveniles.  My daughter hopped onto Google to see if there was a nature preserve or some similar entity that could rescue the skunks, just as there are organizations that will rescue a litter of unwanted puppies or kittens.  It seems there are no such organizations in Illinois, no doubt because of that state law.  There are some in Indiana and Missouri, but we'd have to somehow catch the skunks and transport them, and that sounded beyond our capability.

So today, the service came again, took away the two little skunks in the trap, and also was able to catch the juvenile (or it may have been a different one, who knows) that was wandering around the back yard.  That little feller, it turns out, was more mature than the guy suspected: it managed to give him a good squirt and the yard smelled pretty skunky for a while this afternoon.

It seems likely enough to me that the first capture was a mamma skunk that had a litter in the burrow.  Our traps have been picking off her litter ever since; presumably the little ones, growing hungry with no mamma, have been emerging to see if there is any food to be had.

The final score of all this seems to be a series of dead animals, including some very young and helpless ones, and a suburban home gradually becoming encased in chicken wire.  I don't feel real great about that.  On the other hand, I need to have a livable home, and as is the case for a lot of middle class types, the house is among my largest assets.  I can't just give it back to nature.  Maybe the treaty is really an armistice.

21 comments:

  1. About varmints, I hear you! We've fought a few of those battles ourselves over the years. At least where we are now there aren't rattlesnakes. When I was growing up there was everything from snakes to coyotes to skunks. Of course it was a ranch, not suburbia. The worst time was when Dad shot a skunk in a window well. Unfortunately it was my bedroom window. I had to sleep at Grandma's for a week. My mom went to see the priest about something. He got a peculiar look on his face and she realized the skunk smell must be clinging to her clothes. Dad had some vet bills from dogs getting a face full of porcupine quills, too. They usually just investigate porcupines once.

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  2. The day we moved in here a raccoon trotted up on our patio, looked in through the sliders and, I swear, shook his head and trotted off. He, or a friend, spent a lot of time in a tree up the block. He finally disappeared, a result, no doubt, of Florida drivers.

    We often pass dead raccoons, usually young 'uns, on the streets between here and church, about two miles away. The church has three domesticated formerly feral cats -- Mama, Simon and Jude. The staff feeds them. When Mama was losing her food to raccoons, a hunter was called in. He trapped 12 coming in from a huge forested lot next door, but he thought there might be one left.

    Then there are the iguanas who are pests to people with swimming pools. They die, or look dead, at poolside. When you go to pick them up, some of the dead ones come alive and run off. And, rarely, gators.

    We have anoles (chameleons) in the house all the time. You show them the door, and it's like showing Dracula the garlic. Once they are in they are determined to stay.

    The most impressive wild life, though, was avian. I was typing away with the windows open and the birds chirping. All at once the chirping stopped completely. I opened the front door to see what was going on, and there was a beautiful red-shouldered hawk sitting on our mailbox. He didn't look hungry. We had a wood stork in the yard yesterday. They used to hang out farther west in the Everglades, but they are increasingly becoming an urban bird.

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    1. Gators are my number one reason for not moving to Florida. There is no body of fresh water that I would go into there.

      There's a Harry Potter episode where some magical creature or other appears to each person as the individual or creature they fear the most. For Ron Weasley, it's a spider. For me, it would be a gator.

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    2. Tom, yes, the Season of the Racoon Road Carnage always succeeds the Season of Deer Road Carnage in my area of Michigan.

      Jim, venomous snakes for me. Or, really, any snake curled up where it's a surprise. I don't mind them when I know where they are.

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    3. Jim, Gators can run up to 35-40 miles per hour for short distances. BUT his jaws aren't made for the human shape. If you don't fall down, he probably can't get a grip on you. Miccosukee Indians "wrestle" with them by holding their jaws shut. A gator can close his jaws with force you don't want to know about, but his jaw-opening muscles are no great shakes. Additionally, if you roll an alligator on its back (not recommended for beginners) it will go right to sleep.

      Additionally, if a gator has has a chicken, say, in the past 30 days, he won't be hungry or aggressive (except in mating season). We always take visitors out where they see them live and in color.

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    4. Yes, while hiking Tammany Mountain at the Delaware Water Gap, I once dodged a copperhead strike. Funny how a rational fear is not as paralyzing as an irrational phobia of something harmless. I got a very long branch and prodded it off the trail for the sake of the New Yorkers.

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  3. Bears are slowly making their way south and into suburbia. Not sure why. There is still plenty of habitat for them in the U.P.

    We live in a rural area and see deer and coyotes in the village occasionally. Overrun with rabbits again this year.

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    1. We had a deer in our yard one Thanksgiving in suburban Trenton (which means, basically, urban Trenton), New Jersey. When I say "had," I mean it was there; we didn't eat it.

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    2. I am tender-hearted about Our Dumb Friends, but I am becoming rather unsentimental about the damn deer. They have no natural predators here, and they have to be regularly "taken out" (as in shot) in muncipal parks. The meat is given to the prison system or food banks, as I understand it. Better they "go" that way than get hit by cars on the highway and cause life-threatening accidents.

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    3. I suppose the state could raise the seasonal limits on deer taken by hunters. In Illinois, I think it's one deer per license issued. I guess that wouldn't solve a deer overpopulation problem in suburbs and municipal parks, though. Although over time, if there is less competition among them for territory, maybe the deer population would tend to shy away from human habitats.

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    4. Part of the problem is that parks plant flowers and stuff (tulip bulbs in Windmill Park, Holland, Mich.) that deer like to eat, and there are no predators scaring them off. Except the DNR sharp shooters.

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  4. Jean, seems bears also live in the northern parts of the L.P.?

    People around here have a difficult enough time sharing our habitat with coyotes. If bears started prowling around, the guns would come out.

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    1. Mackinac City usually has a story about having tranquilize a bear that wanders into a fudge shop.

      But there was a small black bear that was wandering around garbage cans in Midland (near Saginaw) while everyone was in town for my mom's memorial service. That area is well below the northern L.P.

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  5. On my 1.5 acre in the Poconos, I've spotted opossum, turkey, turkey vulture, raccoon, coyote, bear. All rather rarely. I guess they heard I possess a shootin' iron that'll kill anything in North America. I would definitely carry it in gator territory. Just in case I ever get 'et by a gator, I ordered one once in an Orlando restaurant so at worst, it would be Kopacz one, aligators one.

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    1. Fauna: Ditto Catskills just north of the Poncos...or maybe they're all part of app-a-latcha...

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  6. Well, we live in suburbia, on a quarter acre lot, about 10 miles from the DC line. A long way from Michigan - upper or lower. There are bear sightings pretty much every year in the DC suburbs, and a couple of years ago, there was a young bear in the yard of a house in DC itself. There are coyotes, although we haven't seen any in our woods. They had to get a professional trapper out to a community of townhouses (!) because there were so many coyotes lurking around there. Our house backs up to a small wooded area with a small stream that flows into to a much bigger stream three houses down at the end of the street. The larger stream eventually flows into the Potomac river. When there are no leaves and undergrowth, we see a fox run back and forth along the stream several times every day. A little harder to see him/or her in the summers though. We see deer every day and try to keep them out of our yard with about a 50-50 success rate. They come in - back and front - to munch the flowers and azaleas and ivy. We have rabbits and squirrels living in our yard, and there are raccoons and opossum as well, in the woods, occasionally seen in our yard. We see turkey vultures on the roads, cleaning up the deer and squirrels. No skunks for many years though! Mice often find their way into the house during the winter, unfortunately.

    We have had two pair of cardinals living somewhere in our 1/4 acre yard/small woods for several years. They are here all year round. We have a small pond in the back yard that has frogs. We have many kinds of birds - attracted by the feeder, including crows, which we have to shoo away because they will finish off the seed in no time. We have owls, robins, doves, woodpeckers,sparrows and slate colored junkos, bluebirds, chickadees and, very rarely, we have seen an oriole. The heron who lives in a pond in the neighborhood park about two streets away shows up in the stream now and then, but that is pretty rare. He mostly stays in his pond, lording it over the Canadian geese who live there all year round. And the bull frogs.

    Last winter I looked out my window to see the fox in the yard itself (it's a cut through from the woods to who knows where). He was holding a struggling squirrel in his mouth. In 45 years in this house, that particular sight wa a first. Usually he hunts in the woods, and we don't have to see the death throes.

    We started vacationing on Sanibel Island, FL about 30 years ago, almost every year. We stay Gulf-front - which means SALT water front. I don't like gators either, and would never buy a property on fresh water in Florida!

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    1. We have foxes in this area and I've seen a few over the years trotting by. One year, while we were lining a street waiting for the Independence Day Parade to start, a fox trotted right down the middle of the street as though it was part of the parade. The street was lined with thousands of people - it really caused a sensation.

      Anne, Stanley and Peggy - I've never seen a turkey vulture; I wouldn't know one if it walked up and introduced itself to me. But where my parents live, about 80 miles away from here in a suburban area, a flock of turkeys has been living in their subdivision for years now. There is a stream a couple of blocks from their home where they like to congregate during the day, and they nest in people's yards. They're real pests, and a little intimidating when you encounter the flock when you're out walking.

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    2. We have turkey vultures here; there are some that fly overhead in circles in the neighborhood where our church is. I remarked to my husband that it makes me nervous when they fly over me; do they know something I don't know?

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    3. Our turkey vultures are snowbirds. They have been traced to some place in Ohio -- Columbus I think -- in the summer, but they winter here. Fewer this year than usual. They also used to operate at higher altitudes; since Hurricane Wilma, in 2015, they appear more often at treetop level. I am wondering if Wilma did something I don't know about to our bug life.

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    4. My cousin lives in the Fort Lauderdale area. Following Hurricane Andrew, she found a big parrotlike bird perched in one of her trees. She enticed it down with grapes, got hold of it and brought it inside, eventually getting it into a cage. The bird bonded with her and it talked. And talked and talked and did sound effects. When one of my cousin's sons married, I attended the wedding and stayed at her house. At one point, I heard myself in the next room laughing. It was the bird, of course, and my cousin said it laughed like me for a year. By the way, it was an African Greybird, reputed to be the smartest bird. It died about five years later. Must have been 150 years old when she found it.

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