Friends,
In the wake (sorry) of my tribute to Dave, your kindness has been piling up all around me. But this is the cool thing about love: you can’t spend it down, because the more of it you put out, the more is created. And we all know what the world needs now. It’s a new year; maybe, together, we can change a few things around here. Thank you for every word. Thank you all.
And now back to our regularly scheduled stuff & nonsense:
In the wintertime, when the trees are bare, you really notice the squirrel nests. They’re a disgrace. They’re a derelict association of dead leaves with no obvious integrity. The winds are blowing hard and they have been for months. There’s no reason those suckers should be intact.
But they are. They’re still there. It makes no sense.
You can understand that sort of persistence in a hummingbird nest. Lady hummingbirds make a nest of lichens, spider butt juice, and cussedness, and it’s so sturdy you could set it as a solitaire in an engagement ring and it would outlast the average marriage.
The squirrel nest looks like the tree hawked up a big old leaf loogey that didn’t quite clear its branches.
I suppose squirrels are cute, if you squint, or you’re a child, or a foreigner from a rodent-free land. I’m not a fan. Squirrels will eat your solar panels, chew wiring, and dismantle fuel lines in your car. They routinely disembowel the tough outdoor seat cushions, and when you try to slice them up for the garbage can—the seat cushions, not the squirrels, settle down—your box cutters can’t get through them. But those big fancy rats can, no problem. You know how you have to microwave a butternut squash for three minutes just to begin to get the peel off? Squirrels chomp right through. One chomp per squash, just to be dicks about it.
Oh, it’s possible to think of the little assholes as cute, and they would be if the scenery were not slathered in squirrels, but it am. The ubiquity of squirrels counts against them, in my opinion. And there’s no end to the ubiquity. They are up there in those disreputable nests just pumping out new ones all year, and when they’re not, they’re thinking about it. The nests are officially called “dreys,” which is one letter off from dregs.
So I looked it up. And sure enough, they’re more elaborate than they look. They start with an actual scaffolding of twigs, a bit of architecture that isn’t evident from down below. They’re always built way up high, and we only see them from the bottom, and you may be forgiven for assuming they are just huge crappy cup nests, because that’s what I thought too until I looked it up.
But they’re not. They’re a big constructed nearly-waterproof hollow ball of woven leafy twigs with a door at the bottom near the tree trunk. They’re all fortified with leaf-mâché, and cozy with moss and grass and shredded bark and related items, according to the experts. The experts are covering their asses with the “related items” bullshit. They just are. This is what they mean: inside the nest, there’s a home office, integrated smart home technology, and in-floor heating. The shell is fortified by packed electrical wiring, fuel lines, and purloined seat cushion fluff. The domicile is further strengthened and shaped from the inside by packs upon packs of tiny rodents being raised and trained to harvest their own wiring and fuel lines and fluff. And so it goes, on and on.
Talk about sustainable living.
Some years ago I found a gray squirrel nest that had blown down during a storm. It was as you describe, very sturdy construction. I’m not sure how it managed to blow down, but these things happen.
It was basically a basket with leaves. I don’t recall putting my hand inside, but who actually remembers every little thing they did over forty years ago?
I wouldn’t remember if I did it last week. But that’s cool. A blown-down nest.
When I had a vegetable garden, one particular squirrel was my nemesis for two years running. Every time a tomato just started to turn ripe, it would be picked, have ONE bite taken out of it, then left RIGHT AT MY BACK DOOR! This was one passive-aggressive little shit-weasel! Now that I just grow herbs, I don’t have a problem with them. My bird feeders actually ARE squirrel-proof. I have lots of squirrels, as I have a lot of trees. They amuse me with their mock battles and humping each other on my deck. They make me laugh, which usually takes a late night comedian to accomplish.
My new enemy is the Raccoon. One really huge one kept going into my fish pond in the wee hours, knocking over my fountain head, and worse — ate all my goldfish, which had grown to a nice size and had been there for several years. (I’ve since gotten some more small fries, but it’s not the same.)
Then, when having my gutters cleaned, the guy noticed a hole in the roof of my garage-apartment in the back, It was a raccoon hole and they were living in the crawl space over the apartment. So I had to enlist a pest control service that did raccoons ($3000) and they rid me of about 5 of the mofos who were living there. Then I could have the roof patched (another $6000).
So count your blessings if there are only squirrels. Raccoons can do so much more damage, most of which is expensive to fix.
I’ve GOT raccoons, but so far the only thing they’ve done is dance and party on my roof when I’m trying to sleep, and threaten Dave when he had his pants down, and establish a latrine on the south side of the house. Chewing an entire hole in a roof is definitely not something I would like. “At least I’ll get a blog post about it” is a frequent phrase around here but that’s just over the top.
Okay, I’m puzzled. Why did Dave have his pants down around raccoons? Was HE also trying to establish a latrine on the south side of the house, and he and the raccoons had a skirmish about it?
Thanks, Mimimanderly, we were all asking this in our heads but it needed your forthrightness to commit it to print!
All right, all right. Yes. Establish a latrine. Dave worked hard and got dirty and sometimes peed behind the shed rather than track mud into the house. He was just coming back zipping up when he encountered a troupe of five raccoons standing on their hind legs and, he felt, in judgment.
Raccoon latrines invite MORE raccoons (according to ODFW). They advised me to remove the 💩 and leave a few mothballs… it worked, no more visitors.
I was advised to don a mask (to keep from inhaling parasite eggs that happily eat human brains, but more slowly than zombies do), throw away the raccoon poop, add bleach liberally and finally sprinkle coyote urine about. The coyote urine turned out to be a mistake. After I did that we saw our first coyote in our yard, looking up at the bird feeder hungrily. It must have considered the pee another coyote’s seal of approval. It sure was pretty, still in its winter coat. My wife spotted it but she thought it was a dog…
Mothballs? My fingers aren’t nearly nimble enough to spread their little legs apart….
AR AR AR! I believe I once considered cleaning up the latrine but then found all that info about hantaviruses and masking and bleach and god knows what-all, and decided it could be handily ignored. The latrine, not the advice.
Only once have I had the good fortune to be able to watch a hummingbird revving in reverse, tugging at a spider web to incorporate into her nest. I leave all the spiderwebs in the yard undisturbed, but I haven’t seen that again.
Isn’t that something? Especially since spiderwebs almost disappear into nothing. I have seen a hummingbird hover in front of an orb web and BOOP! delete the spider. That was fun. Not that I dislike spiders.
My neighbor feeds the squirrels- so of course they are like ants- everywhere!. Plus they dig up the front porch plants (BIG tsk tsk) If I were a gun owner I’d be blasting them off to squirrel heaven. Occasionally I find a fried squirrel underneath the electrical wires/transformers out front and go “oh that’s why the light dimmed ever so briefly” unfortunately that leaves just the smarter ones behind…….And yes- raccoon poop has bad bad bad parasites in it…. pick it all up with disposable plastic gloves and throw away in the sealed bag you stuffed it into.
I can go years between raccoon sightings even though I know they’re here. They seem to alternate with the possums.
Yes- there is a balancing of the populations …. known to those who study such things
Hi Susan: Electrical systems in your town or perhaps now-a-days all over must be more robust. Forty five years ago when I was in Bible college a squirrel plunged the town of Lima, NY into darkness for hours after losing its grip on a power line and deciding to supplement the grip of his claws with his teeth. BZAP! I didn’t see the crispy critter, but one of my fellow students witnessed it.
The thing about squirrels — it’s the same thing as the thing about raccoons — is that they’re rivals, not dependents. They have this urban living thing figured out at least as well as we do, and their contempt for us is palpable. That twitch of the tail is a squirrel’s way of saying, “you’re so slow I’m not even going to bother move out of your way,” and you can see one of the Great Mama raccoons, shaking her head, as she ambles home at dawn, and muttering, “damn they’re stupid. Did they really think I was going to fall for that have-a-heart trap?”
I was once charged by a squirrel on the sidewalk and it terrified me. I’m not super proud of this.
Also- there is a very interesting film about raccoons in Toronto, I believe- shows how smart and on the move they are- they have multiple homes, and move between them very frequently. It’s an eye opening film from a neighborhood with 600 raccoons/sq mile if I remember correctly
I think the last raccoons I saw were in Toronto!
I only have one raccoon confrontation story and hopefully I haven’t told it here before. If I have, sorry.
Some years ago when I was still living with my parents I woke up one night with the sound of something digging in the ceiling over my head. That didn’t make any sense so I went down the hall, pulled down the attic stairs and went up to investigate. When I pulled the cord for the light, I immediately saw a raccoon about ten feet away from me. He looked at me, I pulled the light cord and went down the stairs, closing them behind me. They’d no sooner thumped into place than I heard raccoon feet thundering down the length of the house. My dad and I looked, but never found the entry point. I suspected he’d gotten in through the garage. My dad didn’t say so, but I got the impression that he thought the whole thing was a figment of my imagination.
Is that not even a possibility? I once woke up from a nap when I was a child and floated all the way down the stairs, a fact I immediately reported to my mom. I don’t know what she thought about it, but I remember doing it.
I once helped a friend in WVA trap a squirrel using a cage and a can of tuna fish. Then we realized it had babies living under the deck so we let it out so the babies wouldn’t die. The odd thing is that when the raccoon ran out, it wasn’t carrying anything, but the can from the tuna fish was gone. We called an animal rescue line hoping to find out that the raccoon wouldn’t have eaten the metal can. The person we spoke with said that the raccoon had probably put it “in her pocket.” Like a kangaroo? Raccoons don’t have pockets, right?
Raccoons only have pockets when they’re wearing trousers.
I find the knowledge level of animal rescuers and animal control officers to be all over the map. There’s some with vast amounts of knowledge stored in their brains and some who are confident to hand out opinions without bothering to fact check them.
Some years ago a fox that was clearly suffering from mange turned up in the woods behind my house and proceeded to stay in the open for hours. I notified the township’s animal control officer and was duly informed that given that it was spring, the fox in question had most likely just emerged from hibernation and that explained its tatty appearance and erratic behavior. No need to be concerned about mange mite transmission or possible rabies.
Foxes don’t hibernate.