[Magdalen] Where do they live?

Chad Wohlers chad at satucket.com
Thu Oct 18 14:14:10 UTC 2018


Hah!!!

Just last night I was trying to get some sleep when I was rudely awakened by noises outside on the porch. We have bird feeders out there, plus a suet feeder attached to a post. I didn’t even have to think about what it was – I knew – the racoons were back. There were two of them, trying to open the cage which holds the suet and which is secured by a twist-em. I got up and opened the door to the porch and they actually went away – after a few nights of this they just look at you as if saying “Yeah, so?”. It was only 35F or so outside so I wasn’t about to really go out on the porch , dressed (or undressed) as I was. They of course came back and I tried to just ignore them, but finally did get up and chased them away again. When I got up this AM about half the suet was gone, along with the twist-em. Eventually they’ll go into hibernation for the winter, but it hasn’t happened yet.

And, BTW when I got up there was a thin coating of that dreaded white stuff outside – first of the season. It’ll be gone by noon-time, but it’s only a harbinger of things to come.

Chad Wohlers
chad at satucket.com
Woodbury, VT    USA

From: M J _Mike_ Logsdon
Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2018 8:10 AM
To: magdalen at herberthouse.org
Subject: [Magdalen] Where do they live?

As I was leaving my bathroom this evening (last evening, I suppose, actually) and turned off the light, I saw movement in my small apartment backyard.  I'm used to seeing cats on the fence, so that's what I expected, but movement is movement, so I needed to investigate.  Keeping the light off so I could see, I was struck by three things:  (1) the cat I saw on the fence was HUGE, (2) it didn't skitter down the other side of the fence immediately as normal, and (3) the striped tail and the bandit mask revised my opinion on the spot as to what I was witnessing.

My Backyard Masked Animal showed no typical animosity as often seen on TV, but that could've been because it was smart enough to know that a face looking out of a dark room in a building was hardly gonna leap out and challenge it.  It quickly, but smoothly, made its way down the other side of the fence like the cats do, but with no sign of anxiety on its part whatsoever.

Yes, it was my first raccoon.  But being a city dweller where such things are seldom seen, that shouldn't be a surprise.  And I did look up and find the following, which explains a bit:

"New habitats which have recently been occupied by raccoons (aside from urban areas) include mountain ranges, such as the Western Rocky Mountains, prairies and coastal marshes.  After a population explosion starting in the 1940s, the estimated number of raccoons in North America in the late 1980s was 15 to 20 times higher than in the 1930s, when raccoons were comparatively rare.  Urbanization, the expansion of agriculture, deliberate introductions, and the extermination of natural predators of the raccoon have probably caused this increase in abundance and distribution." (Wikipedia excerpt.)

Its a reference beyond ("aside from") urban areas, which my area basically is, but, still, -- where does such a clearly well-fed raccoon actually live?  Grant you, I'm not terribly far from hundreds of miles of ag fields, but something made this well-fed monster decide to "come into town and make a night of it".  Would such a creature maybe have an actual life here, in town, even in my neighborhood?  Doesn't bother me one whit.  I'm just curious.

And my Masked Friend makes the second "wild" animal I've encountered in this part of my town.  Long ago, my route to work was detoured to the extreme to make ample room for law enforcement and animal specialists to deal with the (from what I remember) very young bear that somehow made it into the neighborhood I actually now live in.  Raccoons, yes.  But bears?  They happen in Monterey and Carmel all the time, because they have heavily wooded areas close nearby, and can actually be said to be situated within same.  But Salinas Valley flatland?  All I can admit to right now, is that we do have "mountains ranges" nearby.

M J (Mike) Logsdon.

"Aaugh[.]" -- Charles Brown.
"Avoid dull needles and use a soft cloth." -- E Kovacs.
"Because that's the kind of guy, I'm." -- C Reiner, "Your Show of Shows", skit: "From Here to Obscurity".




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