Friday, March 5, 2010

Vicious Little Thieves

Wildlife and I don’t get along. It wasn’t until I moved to my current house I began to encounter the more sinister types of wildlife, like raccoons and deer. And until my encounters with these menacing creatures, I didn’t realize that not all dangerous animals are stored in cages.

I used to love wildlife. When I was a kid our house backed up to Knowland Park Zoo in Oakland, California. All we had to do to see wildlife was climb up the steep banking to the hundreds of acres of rolling foothills belonging to the zoo, and walk two miles (probably only three-quarters of a mile, but it seemed like two miles) down a dirt fire trail to where they housed the animals in their respective pens. Maybe I loved the wildlife because it was in cages. Maybe I loved it because sometimes we could hear the trumpet of an elephant, or the barking of seals when the wind was just right. We could clearly hear the demanding call of the orangutan no matter what the conditions. Very distinctive call and I can imitate it well. Those who have known me a while can attest to this. It isn’t for the very young or the feint of heart to hear, however, so doesn’t ask me to “do the orangutan” unless we are somewhere secluded.

Photo taken by Kabir Bakie

This early experience with wildlife was a positive thing. I loved all the animals and the little train circling the zoo and the little bags of fish you could toss into the seal pool. The monkey and ape enclosures provided easy viewing and I learned you had to stand back from the camels and giraffes so they wouldn’t spit on you.

When I moved into my current place, I fed my cat out on the back deck. When I poured out his food, he’d swivel his head all around, checking the woods behind the house. Any tiny noise and he would spring into the air and the hair on his tail puffed out like a blowfish. One day I glanced out of the window and saw five raccoons gathered around his dish, chomping on the crunchies, chattering and slapping each other on the back like happy hour at Charlie’s Tavern. My cat watched from the top of the patio table at the other end of the deck, his claws firmly entrenched in the wood and his eyes huge.

Enraged they were eating my cat’s food, I charged out onto the back deck, flailing my arms and yelling so they’d scamper away into the forest. Instead they bared their teeth, rose up on their haunches and growled at me, their claws at ready. I backed into my house and shut the door, staring at them until the bar closed and they drove themselves home to the woods. I silently inched open the glass and the cat came inside where I fed him from a cut glass bowl to make amends.

There came a knock, not at the front door but at the bedroom’s sliding glass screen door as I huddled in my bed the next evening, reading a great book. The hair prickled on the back of my neck. I doused the reading light and slid out of the bed, tip-toeing to the bathroom so I could look out that window to see who was at my screen door. Three or four masked bandits scurried around the deck, peering in the glass and pounding on the screen.

What unmitigated gall. I flew down the hall, grabbed the broom I’d left by the family room door and flipped on the back light. I hauled in a deep breath, clamped my hands around the broom handle and flung open the door to the big deck. They all waited, even the ones who had been down on the deck outside my bedroom at the other end of the house. I shouted and gyrated, waving the broom around, but the animals just hissed and pointed at the empty spot where the dish used to be. Once again, they stood up on their haunches, flicked out their claws like a switchblade and indicated the spot where supper used to be was empty. A couple of them had their hands on their hips and glared. I sighed and back stepped into the house, defeated.

It took a week until they gave up pounding on my doors and windows, cussing me out in Raccoonese, and another week for the cat to eat his dinner in the kitchen without continually glancing all around him. It only took me seconds to realize these vicious little thieves were not in cages, nor did they resemble the cute raccoons Walt Disney Studios portrayed in films. It was a rude awakening

18 comments:

  1. Oh, but the raccon is so cute. Could you not just be friends. :)

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  2. I have to agree with jenku. Raccoons are cuddly little darlings - how could you not love them?! They're a lot better than cats! After all, cats have razor sharp claws, too, and they hiss, too! On top of that cats are arrogant. No one has ever accused a raccoon of being arrogant.

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  3. Jenku and Karen,

    I AM accusing the knavish raccoons of being arrogant blackguards. The little darlings can rip a person apart. And my poor, sweet kitty was an outdoor cat. He shouldn't have had to put up with the bilge-drinking pirates. (Just saying)

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  4. I think they might make great marines. They only need a happy ship and a captain's firm hand. ;)

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  5. Sheeeez, they would mutiny at the first bad meal, let me tell you. And they are not shy about it, either, the pugnacious varmints.

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  6. I raised a baby raccoon once. It was like having a kitten, except he had his own lockpicks and knew how to use the remote. Then he became a teenager and I was glad the naturalists at the Hueston Woods Nature Center took him back (I was raising him at their behest).

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  7. Oh, sure, all baby animals are cute and cuddly, but now you know how troublesome the rotten rogues can be. He used the remote? HA!

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  8. We don't have raccoons in NZ. We have possums. Lots of possums (Oh, and sheep). Raccoons may be bilge-drinking pirates/pugnacious varmints (love that!), but they're very cute. Arrogance is a sign of character is it not? One just has to remember to feed cat indoors and always have a broom handy.

    Enjoyable post. As always :)

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  9. Yeah, they are cute, deceptively cute, which is why I faced them unarmed the first time. The second time, armed with the broom, faired no better. They are fearless. You'll just have to trust me on this.

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  10. hahaha!! That is really funny :D Sorry, but it is! My first thought would have been to grab a hose. Yeah, come and harass me, but you're going to get a soaking for your troubles...lol...

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  11. They probably would have brought out a cake of soap and some body spray, Kurt.

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  12. During a summer visit to a friend's house in Portland, a raccoon entered her house via the slit in the screen door he had previously sawed. I couldn't believe he would be so brash, just walk right in as if he did it everyday (he did). She jumped up yelling and he stared blankly for a few seconds, slowly turned and said, "I'll be back later for leftovers."

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  13. I'll trade you one armadillo, one hibernating snake, and a sackful of tree frogs for your family of raccoons....

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  14. haha!! Yeah, I can picture that :)

    What are you doing about them? Are you just going to leave them to terrorise your cat? We have the same problem here with squirrels, only they're not quite as scary and they have less attitude...lol...Unless you're a cat. They have a bad attitude towards cats.

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  15. Karen,

    Um...thanks for the generous offer, but really I couldn't accept. Keep your critters. (You can read about Karen's own exploits by clicking on "To TV for a Year" on my blog roll)

    Kurt,

    They eventually departed when I no longer fed the cat outside. It took about a week for them to stop their harassment. About a month after that they moved out entirely. Good luck with the squirrels--wretched little pests.

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  16. poor little raccoon family...

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  17. Karen,

    If I see them again, I'll give them your address. Perhaps they can make friends with the snake-in-the-bucket at your house.

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