At about noon, Beth returned from a trip to Lancaster and the three of us went on another wet walk, shorter this time. Unfortunately, Higgins seems rather hostile towards her, nips her and goes into an arms-wide, head-down, aggressive posture towards her occasionally. It worries me that they don't seem to get along, for she has little interest in him. My original agreement with Tom months ago when Higgins first arrived on my doorstep was for him to be rehabilitated at XXXX in part by the resident intern. When Tom first interviewed prospects for the position, the job of rehabilitating a raccoon was clearly indicated as part of the internship. So far this is not working out. I had to leave XXXX today and Tom says he'll look after Higgins' welfare.
Friday 6 July O Higgins, I miss you, I miss you, I miss you.
Sunday 15 July. Returned to XXXX with a care package for Higgins -- boiled eggs, chopped chicken and various fruits, mostly berries. I was apprehensive that after ten days he would not remember me. I had been out of town a lot and it seemed like a century since I'd seen him. I walked into the lodge carrying my bag of food and met him on the stairway. For half a second he stopped and stared, then ran forward and jumped up to lick my face and shove his nose into my mouth in a raccoon french kiss. He climbed all over me, pushing his hands into my pockets to feel what goodies might be stored there, just as he had always done previously. He looked hale and hearty, having grown a bit and become slightly more grizzled and less gingery in color. Ten days is a relatively long time in the life of a young raccoon..mC*We went rambling up the stream that runs beside XXXX's shelter trail for several hours. Now I let him lead me. When I first brought him to the preserve, I led him along the stream. He knows his way now. He stopped to check out interesting holes and tunnels beside the trail, disappearing for several minutes into muskrat holes and tile stream conduits and emerging with whiskers aquiver. It began to rain, but on we foraged. Higher and higher in the hills we went, into the deep woods -- farther than I had led him before. Higgins did as he had done before, and kept within hearing distance of me during our hike. At one point I crouched down beside the stream, sure that I was ahead of him, focussing my camera on the stream so that I'd have a perfect shot of him approaching me as he paddled and splashed upstream. Then I felt the gentle touch of tiny hands feeling inside my back pocket. Without my noticing, he had sneaked up behind me.He climbed a score or more trees, sniffing the bark of the trees he passed as though they were old familiar friends, some worth climbing , some not. He still favors the large ones with grooved bark. At one stop along the stream he pounced and caught some riparian creature or other -- a salamander? a frog? a fish? I couldn't see. He ate it happily and fast.In the deep woods he climbed sure-footed over emerald moss and rust-brown shelf fungus on rotted logs. He slipped only once, while jumping up a treetrunk -- and he looked around as though embarassed, to see if anyone had noticed. He sniffed every inch of the way, under the Christmas ferns and the ground ivy and myrtle, under the dead logs, under the brambles. RR=At one point we heard an animal crashing through the undergrowth. Higgins stopped, ears cocked, nose aquiver. The mystery animal crashed and stomped about. I was sure it was an enormous monster, maybe a deer (or could it be a moose making all that noise?) No. It finally emerged onto the trail -- a chipmunk. When your ears are tuned to the sigh of the pines and the splash of a raindrop even small creatures sound huge. If you listen right you can hear tiny spiders drumming to their mates on dead leaves. As we walked on, a woodthrush's song filled the universe..We returned along the old familiar trail to the lodge and I stopped on a bridge crossing a stream that feeds the lake while he splish-splashed into the swampy marsh that was once an impoundment of the lake, where cattails grow and redwing blackbirds call. I smoked a cigarette and waited for him. Suddenly I felt twigs dropping on my head -- I've felt that before! He was in a buckeye tree above my head. I had not heard him for the sound of splashing raindrops. |gIt is surprising how little rain reaches the forest floor. When we returned to the lodge Tom XXXXXX said to me, " How come you're not wet?" I was under the trees. The rain had put a stop to Tom's backfill operations on one of Lake Odonata's feeder streams. Tom said that during the week schoolchildren came to the preserve and played with Higgins. He was tame and friendly with them. However, he also broke the aquarium pipes and bit Tom on the beard. Beth said she was following the trails after a storm to see if trees had blown down on them and Higgins followed her all the way -- a couple of miles. @Tom claims Higgins doesn't like the dogchow I brought. It's cheap stuff but nutritious and my local wild raccoons are habituated to it. "Gravy Train" seems to be more to Higgins' taste. I'll bring some on my next visit. Higgins has apparently taken to sleeping up in the ceiling of the front porch at the lodge, where some old planks are stored on the cross timbers. He found a sunflower seed bag there and he snuggles down on it for a kip whenever he feels like it. He has learned how to let himself in and out of the screen door at will so he can come and go as he pleases. He doesn't use his cage much any more. The tender pink pads of his feet have healed and given way to dark brown, not the shiny black of his baby feet but thicker brown skin.
Tuesday 24 July. Tom XXXXXX called this morning to say Higgins had been in a fight and had messed up his right eye. He had taken Higgins to a local vet and obtained oral amoxycillin and some antibacterial eye ointment, but was having a hard time medicating him. Tom's wife is expecting a baby any hour now, and Beth the intern had disappeared off somewhere. So I went down to XXXX to look after Higgins. Higgins had grown, had little energy, and was wild to see me. He gave the usual performance of jumping all over my head, licking my face, and kissing me. His right eye is swollen almost shut and what I can see of it is bloodshot. The inner corner is swollen and oozy, and both lids have nicks and slivers cut out of them. In the middle of his forehead is a large lump with a small bloody nick in it. He's been in a fight no doubt, but he's OK. I wonder what happened to his combatant?He's a bit slow. He sits or lies down every so often, easily tired. He began to play "monkey on a branch" but his respiration rate went way up fast, he was panting with exertion. I took him for a short walk outside, but he only climbed one tree and then rested up in the branchs for 15 minutes. He ate well though, as I had brought some of his favorites -- chopped chicken breast, boiled egg, cherries, grapes and blueberries. He still eats fast and gets hiccups. He took his medication without any fuss. iAt night we settled into the little bedroom under the rafters. While I read the fresh clear stories of the Odyssey, he tickled my toes with his nose and finally purred himself to sleep under the covers. Looking at Higgins' sleeping body lying half-covered on the bed, it seems to me that the long hair on a raccoon's legs and the short hairs on its feet are like fleecy leggings reaching down to velvet socks.#As I had arrived in the preserve today, I had met a man fishing in the lake -- some local doctor. He said he'd had a raccoon for many years, the finest pet he'd ever had. He went everywhere with it, he claimed. He said that one day some people driving past his house stopped their car to look at the raccoon and when one of them opened the car door the raccoon jumped in -- and they drove off with it, dog collar and all. Hmmmm.n^Last time I was here at XXXX, a lady visiting the preserve mentioned that she'd had a 'coon for five years, and when I first brought Higggins here on June 29, some lady at the Saturday (30th) workshop said she'd raised twin 'coons. If only half the tales I hear of people raising 'coons are true, there are a whole lot of folks in the business!
Wednesday 25 July.
Higgins had several "panting"
bouts during the night. It seemed as though he got too hot. He'd lie on his
back with his legs splayed out and I'd blow on his tummy to cool him down.
Perhaps he has a fever from the infected eye. In the morning his eye looked
better -- more open and less swollen -- and the lump on his forehead had
subsided noticeably. I gave him more amoxycillin and eye ointment./TABeth the
intern returned and told me that Higgins had been injured in a fight on Sunday
night. She had heard raccoons fighting, screaming and yelling, and went out to
investigate. She found Higgins sitting soaked in the lake, looking very sorry
for himself. No sign of his antagonist. She tried to put him in his cage for
protection, but he became aggressive and wouldn't go in, so she let him be. He
wandered off, returning on Monday morning with a prizefighter's bloody face. I
guess he's finding out that defending his territory is harder than vanquishing
pineapples. (Higgins had more energy after his night of rest, and ran around
the lodge, climbing up the front porch timbers. He ate well: chicken, dogchow,
and pretzels (from Beth). I left him in Beth's care for the week, as Tom is
home with his wife, who had a baby boy on Tuesday night. @+ Sunday 19
August.++I visited Higgins at XXXX today, bearing gifts in a care package
of chopped chicken, boiled eggs, grapes, and Gravy Train dogchow. As I
approached the lodge, I saw Tom XXXXXX busily regrading the soil between the
lodge and Lake Odonata where the septic tank had ben dug up. I stopped to
chat, holding my picnic basket of goodies at my side. Suddenly Higgins came
barrelling out of nowhere and leaped into the basket. I don't know if he was
happy to see me or just smelled the chicken!+:)Tom now feeds him one meal a day
on the back porch and doesn't let him in the lodge. He says Higgins is too
boisterous to be around visitors now. Apparently Higgins raided the wild mouse
cage that is part of the nature exhibits inside the lodge, and perpetrated
murder on on of the occupants. :'After Higgins had eaten his fill, the two of
us went on a ramble along the shelter trail. He ambles around now more
deliberately than before, stopping to examine points of interest instead of
scurrying and bouncing along the way he used to. He is so much bigger and more
mature. Another inch and he'll be full grown it seems. He is darker, with far
more black guard hairs. His fur is thick and glossy and he looks in fine
health. The eye injury is all healed up. One of his premolars is bleeding a
little. Is he shedding his deciduous teeth? FrHe has lost the skittishness of
earlier days and climbs more slowly, with the steady ease and practised grace
of a well-paced athlete. He went through all his old tricks -- jumping on my
head, kissing me, poking his hands into my pockets, even playing "monkey on a
branch" briefly. But he has the air of one who is older and wiser than the
gambolling kid he once was.0Instead of rushing pell-mell up the stream the way
he did before, Higgins takes his time now, spending time paddling and feeling
about under logs and stones. In several places in the woods he stopped to eat,
though I couldn't see what. He pays far more attention to his surroundings
now, as if he knows every sound. He climbed a tree at a leisurely pace and sat
grooming himself in the crotch of two branches. As he looked down at me I
noticed how panda-like he had become -- more lumbering, more bear-like. The
furry kid has grown up..Tom says Higgins doesn't always sleep in the lodge's
front porch. Sometimes he's gone all night and all day too, so one assumes he
has a place of his own somewhere. Tom is hoping that within a month Higgins
will be out on his own. I wonder.
Sunday 23 September.
I drove down to
XXXX this fine fall afternoon to see if Higgins had finally taken to the
wild. I anticipated wandering all over the preserve, calling to him, and maybe
being lucky enough to catch a glimpse of him in the distance. I was pleasantly
surprised when Tom XXXXXX motioned airily in the direction of the juniper
bushes bordering the entrance road and said, "Oh, he's living down in there."
Sure enough, within a few minutes as we stood talking, Higgins came bounding
out of the bushes and ran up to us.He was limping, holding his rear left leg
up to his body. I had brought a bag of turkey pieces, mostly drumsticks and
wings, and he dove eagerly into it. He is now a big, fat, healthy 'coon with
thick, glossy fur. As he munched on the turkey meat, Tom filled me in on the
month's activities.Higgins is still fairly diurnal. I wonder if raccoons
learn to be nocturnal? Higgins is used to being around humans, who are active
during the day, so he has adjusted his rythms to ours. 7=6%In general, Tom
feels that Higgins is an asset to the nature center's programs. Most visitors
readily identify with this mischevious and cute furry animal. Children
particularly enjoy seeing him around the lake or up in the trees near the
lodge. Not all visitors respond favorably, though.One day, Tom saw three
little old ladies approaching the lodge along the entrance road. Then he heard
shrieks and squeals from their direction. Next he saw them running as fast as
their little old legs would carry them towards the parking lot. He followed in
time to hear the vroom and skid of a fast-departing car, and saw Higgins
casually clinging to the trunk of a nearby tree, looking around puzzled, as if
wondering what all the fuss was about. Apparently the sight of a wild animal
bearing down on them had scared the wits out of these old
biddies.
Watch this space intently for further developments
More meanderings ...