Snake-handling

I’ve been working on my fish pond lately. I thought I had the waterfall fixed. It is not fixed. It’s still leaking. However, the pond seemed to be holding well, so now I have fish! My son Jade brought me six fish from his pond on Mother’s Day and the most beautiful bouquet that’s still going strong.

He said his wife Anjie bought him the special bucket for transport. They all arrived in good condition and still are. I bought some bullfrog tadpoles a couple of weeks ago to help clean up debris in the water and PondStart to condition it. These fish are about four to six inches long, and one of them is a Shebunkin, a pondie known for its koi-like tail.

There were eight koi gracefully swimming around when we moved here. About three months later, something tore through the netting and got them all. We’re blaming raccoons. I could not bear the expense of koi when raccoons and blue herons love them so much–and so often! I decided when I got new fish, they’d be just regular goldfish or pondfish or whatever anyone calls them now. Jade’s pond regulars had had too many babies, so he was happy to give me some.

I told him about my tadpoles and snails. He said that sure is a good way to clean up a dirty pond. I said I hoped nothing got my frogs.

“Well, now, Mom,” he said, “where there are frogs, there are going to be snakes.”

Uh-oh. I was too late. The bullfrogs–and others–were already hopping around and croaking. I knew what was coming.

Monday morning, I went down to the pond to find a snake caught in the netting over the water. She was about inches inches long. I touched her with the can of fish pellets, and she moved. Her middle was free, so I found a stick, pushed it under her loop, and pulled. Oh no, she had a fat place a couple inches from her head, probably half a frog in there, I thought, and an even fatter place where she’d caught the rest of her body, no doubt with the rest of the frog in that half. The stick broke.

Cybil. She almost twisted herself into a knot!

I sat on the side of the pond for a few minutes and studied her, trying to figure out how I’d get her out of the mess she’d created. I named her Cybil–and don’t even ask me how I knew she was a female. She wasn’t poisonous. I can’t imagine trying to free, say, a copperhead. I took her photo and enlarged it so that I could see her problem up close.

I finally decided that the only way this creature would be rescued was by my own hands. I carefully held her belly loop with my left hand and peeled the net away from the back half of her body with my right. The next trick would be to get her head free and back her out of the netting.

If a psychic had told me twenty years ago that I would become a snake handler, I wouldn’t have even laughed at such ridiculousness. But, hey, here I was, inching the net away from her head, freeing her body, and laying her down on the rocks to slither away.

Now, Cybil, I thought, just stay away from the frogs, and you and I will both be happier.

***

My neighbor, VB, maintains a pond just a bit smaller than mine. She’s been interested in sharing her fish with me. She asked if I could take some of the larger ones and some water plants with little rosemary-like spikes that reach for the sun while the fish feast on the roots.

“Oh, yes,” I said, “I’d love three or four fish.”

Yesterday, she pulled out some plants and put them in a big bucket. We peeled back my net to shove it in the water and tried to arrange it to hide the pump and pipes. We did the best we could, using a long pole to push it into place before she took my net to get me some big ‘uns out of her pond. VB and I love to admire each other’s gardens. She was saying how good the waterfall looked with the moss-covered rocks and its long flow into the pool of animals at the end. I was telling her that I thought the waterfall was leaking again.

Then she gasped. I ran to her side, just knowing she’d seen a snake, and said, “What is it? What is it?”

She said, “S-s-snake.”

Here was yet another of these hapless creatures who had poked his head through the net into the waterfall. “Oh, for crying out loud,” I said. “Here we go again.”

“Oh, Di, be careful; I think it’s a copperhead!”

“I don’t think so,” I answered, trying to get a closer view of this one I’d already named Cyrus. His head looked twisted and smushed by the net’s grasp, but he wiggled his body to let me know he was still with us.

“Get a stick,” VB said. “Or maybe a pole. It’s a copperhead. It has a triangular head.”

“No, come look. It’s not. His head is just all wampused (my word) from where the net is. He’s some kind of rat snake or water snake. He’s harmless.”

She gave him a side view. “I can see now, but you know,” she said,” if it has slanted eyes, it’s poisonous.”

“Hmmm,” I said, “I’m not sure I want to get to know him well enough to look him in the eyes.”

“Let me find you a stick. Or maybe we could get that pole we were using.”

“VB,” I said, “That won’t work. I tried it on Cybil, but it didn’t work.”

“How did you get her loose?” she asked. “Did you have to cut the net?”

“No,” I said, “I just pressed and pulled on the net until I could get her free.”

“With your hands.”

“Yes.”

“Di, you make me laugh.”

“Why?” I asked as I reached for the middle of Cyrus.

“Because I can’t think of another woman that would pick up a snake.”

“Well, that’s the only way old Cyrus is going to make it. He’s slowed way down already.”

Cyrus. His head was twisted in the net and he sort of looked dead.

VB said, “I’ll get the net and go get some fish. You work with the snake, but now, I’ll help if you need me to. I will.”

I’m not sure how she would have helped, but I told her to go fishing.

Cyrus had wrapped his tail under a rock, and I could not pull it loose. He was still. VB showed up with some fish. She came over to the waterfall and said, “You can’t get him loose.”

“No,” I said, “let’s just leave him alone. I think he’s just going to have to die that way. Let’s put the fish in.”

“Well, it’s just one. They’re so big I can’t get but one in the bucket at a time.”

We lifted the net again and dumped the orange and white fellow into his new habitat. He took off to join the small ones, and pretty soon, they were following him everywhere he swam.

VB said, “I think he likes his new digs! Okay, I’m going for another one.”

I stepped back up the gravel path to the snake in the net. He was moving his bottom half, and his tail was free.

VB appeared. I told her I was going to the garage for some scissors and maybe a grabber. “I’m going to have to cut him out of this net.”

I cut around his head and neck–if a snake has a neck. He was still moving when I laid him on the path.

When we had successfully re-homed eight of her fish, we checked on Cyrus. His head had improved, and jaws lined up together. He wriggled when I touched him. A half-hour later, he was gone.

I like to think he went home to Cybil.

While I was snake-handling, VB brought at least eight big fish and a couple small ones.

My pond is full…and it’s leaking again.

The Foxes Are Back!

Dave saw them first and was so excited he stuttered a little.  Foxes “Two…two f-f-foxes just r-r-ran into the ravine!”

I was too slow that time, but just a couple minutes later, he said, “They’re crossing that big log! Come quick!”

That time I made it to the dining room window in time to spot the two white-tipped bushy tails as they chased up and down the far side of the ravine. They looked like they were playing.

“They must be yearlings,” I said.

“No,” Dave answered, “They’re full grown, just small.”

We haven’t seen foxes in a few years now. The first spring we lived here on the ravine, two mamas had two bunches of little ones. We loved watching them play and grow. And then they were gone. Maybe it was the mange that ran through the skulk, or maybe it was Grandpa clearing brush from the banks of the big ditch. We miss them.

Like my friend Maybelle, I think fox sightings are a sign. I’m going to say that seeing two foxes running through the back yard and down into the ravine is an omen of good to come in this new year.

2017 was a rough year. I thought it was better not to even attempt resolutions because, at The Compound, not only do they not come when you build it, but they don’t cooperate when you plan it too well.

Sounds like Maybelle is a bit weary of resolutions, too, and Maybelle definitely doesn’t want to be a bada**.  Check her out.  Maybelle says she plans to do the best she can. I can’t fault her for that. In fact, I think I’ll follow her lead.

Maybelle, guess what! We saw foxes in the ravine again. We saw two of them; one for you, and one for me. Happy New Year, Everybody!

Always We Begin Again–Happy 2014

I jumped from my chair when something hit the window beside my desk. A cardinal…on the pavement of the patio. And as quickly as my feet brushed the floor, a Cooper’s hawk snagged the wounded redbird and took to the sky. I breathed jagged ins and outs. My heart sped.
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“This is nature,” I told myself. But it’s the piece of nature that I do not love. It’s been several days now, and I still semi-shudder at the thought of that few seconds.
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I have watched the hawks swoop upon the back yard for months. What I expected was that one of the doves who gleans the leavings from the feeders would be swept away, one of these birds that my bird-hunting Uncle Hugh Lee would never fire upon. “The dove is the Bird of Peace,” he said. “You don’t kill a Bird of Peace.”

The first year on the ravine, we installed birdfeeders to mimic the layout of the yard at our former home. When our expected yellow finches did not arrive, we changed the seed and the feeders, and greedy blackbirds descended in flocks. We learned that blackbirds do not like safflower seeds, but everybody else does, so we changed the menu again and welcomed cardinals, woodpeckers, chickadees, purple finches, and all the common varieties of wrens and sparrows. Doves gathered under the feeders to clean up. For three years, we had Lonesome. Who knows what happened to his partner, maybe a hawk. And now, who knows what happened to Lonesome. The doves now congregate in even numbers.

So much of our life here has been tied to the animals. The first two years, there was the skulk of foxes in the ravine. Lots of foxes, including two litters of pups, three in one and five in the other. One of the yearlings nested under the ramp to the porch on the side of the house, always taking leave before the humans might interfere. We watched them dig for moles and bury food for future meals.They caught pieces of hotdogs in mid-air that the neighbor tossed to them in the summer dusk. We noticed that, while they were off the ground, they were snapping up fireflies. When we returned to The Compound following some evening outing, the headlights caught the eyes of little heads peeking up over the ravine banks. It seemed that they’d been waiting up for us.

The raccoons showed themselves almost immediately. There were three kits that trailed after a waddly-wooly mama when she came to the yard to scout for food leavings, and then a hulking old fellow, biggest raccoon I’d ever seen, completely silver, that we did not see again after that first year. One evening, Dave and I watched a raccoon scale one of the tall trees, probably fifty feet, to rest in a crook between two of the top branches. We figured he was a young one.

The feral calico cat came the first year. We are such creative and original thinkers that we named her Kitty. We watched her stand off a fox one afternoon between our yard and the neighbor’s. She crouched to the ground and backed the vixen up with a threatening feline crawl, until the foxy lady acknowledged Kitty’s superiority by turning white-tipped tail to run. Kitty and I became so close that sometimes she would allow me within fifteen feet of her, then she was gone. No, I mean really gone–for two years. One spring morning, I heard her calling for breakfast from beneath my bathroom window, sitting kitty-pretty as if we’d had tea the afternoon before. She hung around for a year after our Welcome Back and then something caught her, or caught her eye, the something probably akin to a better living arrangement.

We found companionship living on the banks of this old gulch that we call The Ravine. My eighty-something-year-old dad, Grandpa, frequented the ravine by propping a tall ladder’s base against a big tree. He said if he missed a rung on the way down, he’d just slide.
“What about the trip back up?” I asked.
“I hold on with both hands,” he said.
Grandpa dug through the tangles of brush and vine to judiciously remove the deadliest tree-chokers. We laid out something of a feeding station so that we could better watch the comings and goings of our new friends. Grandpa and Grandma keep the blinds wide open in their upstairs den so that they don’t miss the squirrels’ antics in the tall trees on the west side.

One season brought a doe and two spotted fawns. They bedded down in the across-the-street neighbors’ back yard. When Mama left, the twins stayed, mowing down roses, morning glories, and turnip greens. And then they were gone, we guessed to join the protected herd two miles away at the agricultural center.

The community of foxes scattered. After a few weeks, we saw sarcoptic mange on the few young males remaining. It’s the same mange that dogs get. We read up on the disease, especially in foxes, and bought injectible Ivermectin to shoot into treats. It was a long shot, according to all the literature, but we tried to save them.

Once the foxes were gone, rabbits appeared. One little bunny hopped around on the porch just in time for Easter.

Last spring, we watched a fat old mama raccoon stagger across the back yard at 6:00 A.M. like a drunk coming off an all-nighter. She climbed the steps to Grandpa and Grandma’s apartment, hopped onto the rail nearest the wall, shinnied up the porch column, and disappeared. We’d suspected squirrels in their attic space and had already called a carpenter to further seal in the eaves on the porch. We never thought about a nesting raccoon. Before Trevor, our construction guy, finished the work that might seal a creature in, he toured the attic space and pronounced it empty–and very clean.

Groundhogs greeted us early on, without damage, until they discovered just how good Grandpa’s produce tastes at its youngest and most tender. He named them, set live traps, and somebody (Dave or daughter-in-law Vicky, that tiny little hoss of a woman) hauled them, one by one–Fatso, Big Boy, Chubby, and all the others–to the spacious agricultural center property. All reports indicate that they hunkered down and belly-scrambled to the care and prosperity of the burgeoning Ag Center Clan. But last year, new-to-the-compound Gordo foiled us all, despite numerous attempts to move him to a better neighborhood for groundhogs. In late fall, neighbors sighted Gordo pinned to the ground by a coyote in their back yard, but we expect him back.  The neighbor showered the coyote with a hail of BB’s and when the tormenter loosened his grip, the un-injured Gordo made fast to the safety of the ravine. In April or May, we’ll all be complaining about the havoc among the gardens, both flower and vegetable. Gordo adores morning glories and cosmos, squash and Blue Lake bunch beans.

The intersection of human animals and their less domesticated relatives in the kingdom is a delicate point of balance. Every movement by either man or beast, any aid from the higher-ups in the food chain, and any modification made to the combined home turf informs and directs change for each individual. The great naturalist John Muir said it best, “When we tug at a single thing in nature, we find it attached to the rest of the world.”

We feed the songbirds, and a hawk makes dinner of the prettiest one. We clear the vines that threaten to deaden the trees that anchor and define the ravine, and the vixens label us as too familiar. We feed the raccoons to deter them from the garbage cans, and they take up residence in the attic of the apartment. We seal them out and put them back in their place, the place we invited them from when we first fed them.

We continually re-evaluate our relationships to these animals, some who gathered here before someone thought of building brick ranch-style homes alone this great ditch, and others because someone did.

The thermometer read 12 degrees this morning–in the sun. The purple finches and chickadees flitted and darted between the almost-empty feeders. The doves, in their puffiest winter coats, gleaned whatever spill they could find.
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The supremely beautiful cardinals, male and female, orange beaks shining, took turns with the remaining small pieces of bread Grandma and Grandpa tossed from their balcony porch yesterday. The usually-present squirrels stayed in their warm beds. After I finished my third cup of coffee, I layered up to fill the feeders, and when I came back inside to the warmth of The Cellar, I ordered another fifty pound bag of safflower seed.

 

Maybe the coyote was just passing through. Maybe a family of foxes will birth babies here again. Maybe the hawk sightings will be fewer. Maybe Kitty will return for a twelve-month stint. Maybe Gordo will decide he really doesn’t like morning glories, after all.

Happy New Year~from all of us here On the Ravine.


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