I’m following the lead of
Donnie Trump. I’m withdrawing from a treaty and building a wall.
I have to do it to stop
thieving neighbours from stealing my corn. Every year, come late summer, they
sneak into my garden at night and strip the corn stalks clean. Not a single cob
left for me to enjoy.
I’ve tried to coexist
peacefully with them, allowing them to roam my property freely. And this is how
they treat me. Sneaking around at night with their masks, ringed bushy tails
and nimble fingers.
So I have withdrawn from our
treaty and am building a wall. What else could I do? This is not the United
States so I can’t just shoot them.
I bought several rolls of
poultry fencing and have been busy stretching it around my modest corn patch. Now
I am dreaming of the little bandits pacing back and forth outside the fence,
whining about being locked away from those cobs of sweet golden kernels.
I have given this much
thought because, unlike Donnie Trump, I do not consider the enemy stupid. These
bandits, in fact, are quite intelligent.
The Ojibwe people called
them ahrah-koon-em, meaning they could do things with their hands, which have
long, flexible fingers that allow them to steal anything in sight.
These guys are so smart that
some studies show that once they find a solution to a problem, they can
remember it three years later. I have a hard time remembering day to day where
I leave my car keys.
Back in 1908 the ethologist
H. B. Davis found that raccoons were able to open 11 of 13 complex locks in
fewer than 10 tries. Also, they could repeat the unlocking when the locks were
rearranged or turned upside down.
They also have terrific
memories for recalling places where they have found food, and travel long
distances to return to those places. I witnessed that several years ago.
A raccoon was at our compost
bin, banging and chewing and waking us up in the middle of the night. So I
bought one of those no-hurt-‘em cage traps, caught him and transported him
several miles down the highway.
I left the trap armed and
two days later I had another raccoon. He looked very familiar but I figured he
was the other guy’s brother or some other relative. I transported him down the
highway.
Two days later another raccoon
appeared in the trap.
“That’s the same raccoon,”
my wife said.
“Impossible,” I said, loading
him into the boat to take him across the lake to the end of a deep bay where
the forest is thick, wild and isolated.
We had peace for a few days.
Then one morning I got up and found a raccoon in the trap.
“It is definitely the same
guy,” said my wife. “Look at the way he grins at you.”
A heated debate ensued,
ending when I said I would prove it was not the same raccoon returning time and
again. I took an aerosol can of fluorescent orange paint, sprayed his tail and
boated him to the end of the lake.
I figured I now had cleared
my property of all raccoons, presumably that first guy and all his family.
Four or five days passed
before my wife ran in to tell me the trap was filled again. Another raccoon,
this one with an orange tail!
Friends tell me that my
fencing efforts will fail because the raccoons will climb the chicken wire or
tunnel under it. The prize on the other side is too tasty to ignore.
If they do get in I have
another plan. I have read that if you put a portable radio near the corn patch
they will stay away. It can’t be tuned to a music station, however, because
they love music to steal by.
It has to be tuned to an
all-talk station, which fools them into thinking that live humans are guarding
the patch.
There is no electricity at
the garden and I am concerned about the batteries failing. I worry that I could
arrive at the garden one morning, and find the batteries dead and the corn gone.
Or arriving and finding the corn gone, and
the radio playing rock ‘n roll.
#
No comments:
Post a Comment