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  4. Faunascrolling--what's visiting where you are?

Faunascrolling--what's visiting where you are?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Off Key - General Discussion
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  • A Offline
    A Offline
    AndyD
    wrote on last edited by
    #181

    We've been asked to stop feeding birds via bird feeders due to disease. Still throw breadcrumbs.

    Bears in your back yard!
    We've got some bison, beavers and boars now reintroduced to England. But bears no, while wolves, and lynx are still being discussed I understand.

    Ventosa viri restabit

    wtgW 1 Reply Last reply
    • B Bernard

      @wtg I feed year round, can't resist. I guy bags of shelled peanuts for the squirrels. They know me now and make themselves known if the food isn't out.

      A few weeks ago a honking huge black bear broke the door to the entry room off it's hinges--basically a shed attached to the side of the house. That door is a modern wood and plastic thing. The door into the kitchen is a solid wood outside door and that remains intact and I expect it to remain so.

      The reason the bear was able to barrel through into the 'shed' is that the piers it rests on heave horribly in the freeze/thaw cycle every late winter to the point where the door doesn't even latch shut any more and I have to keep it closed by propping a spade against it.

      The 'shed' is where I'd been keeping the bird seed... in a plastic bin. But, unfortunately, the week before this occurrence, I'd accidentally forgot to prop the door closed and the bear was able to walk right in, during the night of course, and discover that beyond the door was the tasty treats he'd been looking for. Hence, his subsequent forcing his way in.

      It hasn't happened since and I don't think it will happen again. I keep the seed in the house now. I saw a bear twice today, but I'm pretty sure it isn't the same one. This one seems like a one-year old, newly on his own.

      They're so cute when they're young! A pic from a few years ago, on the wood pile:
      bear.jpg

      ShiroKuroS Offline
      ShiroKuroS Offline
      ShiroKuro
      wrote on last edited by ShiroKuro
      #182

      @Bernard yikes! That’s disconcerting! I take it you don’t have one of those doorbell cameras? This would be one time you’d love to be able to see just what happened, and how big the creature was who did it!

      1 Reply Last reply
      • ShiroKuroS Offline
        ShiroKuroS Offline
        ShiroKuro
        wrote on last edited by ShiroKuro
        #183

        BTW we had an uninvited guest the other day, just making herself at home… If she was that interested in the neighbor’s yard, she should have sat over there! 😁

        alt text

        wtgW 1 Reply Last reply
        ♥
        • A AndyD

          We've been asked to stop feeding birds via bird feeders due to disease. Still throw breadcrumbs.

          Bears in your back yard!
          We've got some bison, beavers and boars now reintroduced to England. But bears no, while wolves, and lynx are still being discussed I understand.

          wtgW Offline
          wtgW Offline
          wtg
          wrote on last edited by
          #184

          @AndyD said:

          We've been asked to stop feeding birds via bird feeders due to disease

          There was an avian flu making the rounds here a few years ago and people were discouraged from feeding and providing water for birds until the outbreak subsided.

          1 Reply Last reply
          • B Bernard

            @wtg I feed year round, can't resist. I guy bags of shelled peanuts for the squirrels. They know me now and make themselves known if the food isn't out.

            A few weeks ago a honking huge black bear broke the door to the entry room off it's hinges--basically a shed attached to the side of the house. That door is a modern wood and plastic thing. The door into the kitchen is a solid wood outside door and that remains intact and I expect it to remain so.

            The reason the bear was able to barrel through into the 'shed' is that the piers it rests on heave horribly in the freeze/thaw cycle every late winter to the point where the door doesn't even latch shut any more and I have to keep it closed by propping a spade against it.

            The 'shed' is where I'd been keeping the bird seed... in a plastic bin. But, unfortunately, the week before this occurrence, I'd accidentally forgot to prop the door closed and the bear was able to walk right in, during the night of course, and discover that beyond the door was the tasty treats he'd been looking for. Hence, his subsequent forcing his way in.

            It hasn't happened since and I don't think it will happen again. I keep the seed in the house now. I saw a bear twice today, but I'm pretty sure it isn't the same one. This one seems like a one-year old, newly on his own.

            They're so cute when they're young! A pic from a few years ago, on the wood pile:
            bear.jpg

            wtgW Offline
            wtgW Offline
            wtg
            wrote on last edited by
            #185

            @Bernard wins the fauna of the day award! My squirrels are nothing compared to your bear.

            I keep the bird seed in some old metal tins in the garage. The biggest critters we might have would be raccoons, but they've never tried to get to the seed stored in there.

            1 Reply Last reply
            • Piano*DadP Offline
              Piano*DadP Offline
              Piano*Dad
              wrote on last edited by
              #186

              My new little friend in the garden: Western Fence lizard.

              https://www.facebook.com/100000076418541/videos/pcb.27781190928133415/977751011544866

              Crazy economist who likes to write about higher education.

              1 Reply Last reply
              😁
              • ShiroKuroS ShiroKuro

                BTW we had an uninvited guest the other day, just making herself at home… If she was that interested in the neighbor’s yard, she should have sat over there! 😁

                alt text

                wtgW Offline
                wtgW Offline
                wtg
                wrote on last edited by
                #187

                @ShiroKuro Awww....so sweet. But of course I know how destructive deer can be when it comes to landscaping!

                As you say, better in someone else's yard.

                ShiroKuroS 1 Reply Last reply
                👍
                • wtgW wtg

                  @ShiroKuro Awww....so sweet. But of course I know how destructive deer can be when it comes to landscaping!

                  As you say, better in someone else's yard.

                  ShiroKuroS Offline
                  ShiroKuroS Offline
                  ShiroKuro
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #188

                  @wtg said:

                  As you say, better in someone else's yard.

                  Yep!

                  BTW I have been monitoring the lack eyed susan's in the front of our house, and I'm convinced that the animal doing the eating is a deer. The reason I think that is because the spots that are eaten are in the middle of the bunch, as if a large creature walked up and bent their head down from a height, rather than at the edges, as you might expect with a small creature sitting low to the ground and chewing at that height.

                  This is my current "plant detector" analysis. 😄
                  I remain hopeful that there will still be blooms come July 🤞

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  • wtgW Offline
                    wtgW Offline
                    wtg
                    wrote last edited by wtg
                    #189

                    Squirrels. They ate all of my raspberries. Now they're checking out the tomatoes.

                    They left behind a half-eaten tomato and this chewed-off cluster of green tomatoes:

                    alt text

                    So when I saw my first Little Sicily tomato just barely starting to ripen, I knew i had to pick it or the next day I'd be seeing a beautiful tomato with a chomp taken out of it. Little Sicily are a Campari-sized tomato, just perfect for a snack or a sandwich. They ripen beautifully on the counter. It's just heading for the orange stage on its way to red:

                    alt text

                    In a few days I can have a BLT!

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    • J Offline
                      J Offline
                      jon-nyc
                      wrote last edited by
                      #190

                      These two stopped by and took a nap in our yard.

                      IMG_3134.jpeg IMG_3128.jpeg

                      1 Reply Last reply

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