Another refresher course from a previous post. We've already been doing squirrel and raccoon babies. Skunks are starting to give birth just about now.
Spring is a few months away, and that will mean animal babies all over
the neighborhood. Baby birds with their mouths wide open in nests,
waiting to be fed. Pollywogs swimming in vernal ponds. Baby raccoons,
skunks, foxes, possums, etc. living huddled together in hollow logs and
trees, in old stone walls, under sheds, decks, and raccoons in chimneys.
They could be at your house. You're sitting at your kitchen table late
one morning in late May, drinking coffee, and watching the new leaves on
the trees and the new green grass filling in after the winter. Suddenly
you see it! An adult raccoon is walking across your back lawn, It's
daylight, and they're nocturnal. They aren't supposed to be out in
daylight. Something must be wrong. It must be sick. Could it be rabid?
Relax. You're right, they shouldn't be out during daylight, and normally
aren't, but out back is that old dead tree with the hollowed out area
near the top. You've been planning on having it taken down, but haven't
gotten around to it. Well, inside that tree are four baby raccoons about
four weeks old and they are hungry and getting hungrier every day. The
days are getting longer, the nights shorter, and the babies need to be
fed, so the mother is forced to stay out during some daylight in order
to get enough food for her kids. A normally nocturnal animal, seen
outside in daylight during April, May, June, and into July is not a
major cause for concern, as long as they appear to be acting normally.
It's that kids will be kids and they need a constant supply of food.
Always use caution around wild animals, but in this case, enjoy watching
something you normally don't see.
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