Contemporary History #13 – It’s a Cruel World
WARNING!
This post contains content that some may find
upsetting.
WARNING!
Tennessee Tuxedo, Quick Draw McGraw, Mr. Peabody, Heckle and Jeckle, Road Runner, Woody Woodpecker, Mister Magoo, heck, I even liked Davey and Goliath! Of course, also in the mix was Bugs Bunny. He was always being hunted by Elmer Fudd. Most important, Bugs lived in a hole in the ground. That’s the image I carried with me through the years for where rabbits lived.
Of course, I knew rabbits didn’t have furniture and a stove and a phone, nor did they sit down there in an overstuffed chair by a lamp reading newspapers while munching on carrots and saying, “What’s up, Doc?”. My impression was a cave-like place the bunny could crawl into to escape from the world full of predators when a nap, or an escape, was needed. In fact, turns out I was right! North American Cottontails, the bunnies around Drumyngham, don’t live in social burrows or warrens like their European cousins. “Ours” appear to be more independent (Written on the Fourth of July).
Cotton Tails actually do dig a small hole to crawl into or, better yet, find a place under a building or similar structure, any place they can be warm and dry, to survive. I had never seen one of their holes, however. Thus, I had no idea what it was that I had found in my lawn.
All I knew was that it was a rather strange hole. It was located in a less travelled, but still very open and near-by, area of our backyard. In the middle photo above, the arrow points at the nest. We are standing with Drumyngham behind us, looking South. Lower right is still looking South, but somewhat closer to the nest. Lower left is same location but now looking North. The nest is circled in these two lower photos.
Flora and Fauna of Drums #2 – Mammals! - Growls, Snorts, Bugling, and Digging:On June 12, 2021, I noticed a spot in our lawn
that I thought resembled what one might find if a very small meteor
might have slammed into the yard. There was a long (12 inches) slash across the
lawn that ended in a roundish cavity, about the size of a softball, in the
earth. I couldn't imagine what might have caused this. Too small for a Ground
Hog, too big for a skunk digging for grubs. I wondered if it was the start of a rabbit hole,
but why would it be right in the middle of the yard and not hidden away under
brush or high weeds?
I asked Google. Google's response was a photo that looked a lot like my "slash". I was beginning to believe it was the start of a rabbit nest! Apparently, they do these things to create a bunny nursery. If the assumption was correct, I expected that the cavity would be filled in the next day.
It was. I didn't pull back the grass "lid"
to see if baby bunnies were there. I just assumed they were. When Chris came to
mow the yard, I suggested he not mow over the nest. He thought that was a good
idea as well. If all is correct and things go as "planned", the new
bunnies, about the size of chipmunks, should be joining the world on or near
the fourth of July. Yup, Independence Day!
It is now PAST Independence Day, so, I can NOW give you the REST of the story. I must warn you; it isn’t the happy ending that we all expected. However, I don’t want to get too far ahead of myself.
Now that we had some “nature” to watch, we bought a camera to watch it. After a bit of online “research”, we decided our best bet was this little contraption, a CamPark T85 Digital Wildlife Camera. The Koala did not come with it. We took the camera to the rock and strapped the camera to it. The next morning, we rushed out to see what the camera “got”.Nothing. This camera came with a very confusing Owner’s Manual. Seems we had it set incorrectly. Our lack of results told us we needed to set it exactly opposite to what we had set it, and, of course, the next night we got better success.
The next morning, when we checked the camera again, we found this:
We had a rabbit! Seems these mama bunnies have their kits and then leave them in the nest. Each morning and evening, or occasionally once in the very early hours of the day, Mama Bunny comes and nurses her kits. Then she tucks them in and leaves again, only to return the next morning to continue the cycle. This morning/evening routine is maintained for three weeks. By then the kits are big enough to leave the nest and see for themselves what the world holds for them.
Each day, we’d check the camera and each day we were rewarded with photos of Mama Bunny, all usually looking very much the same as above, a rabbit in the grass – but then, what else would one expect?
Well, we didn’t expect this. This photo was snapped on June 27 at 12:27am. One of Mama Bunny’s mid-night visits.We had placed the camera very close to where the
actual kits were nesting. So, it isn’t so much that Mom is looking into our
camera as it’s that she is just maneuvering over her nest.
It was taken at 4:37pm on June 27.
The camera, by the way, takes color photos during daylight hours then
switches to infra-red, which look black and white, after dark.
This activity went on for most of the rest of June - Mama Rabbit in the grass, Mama Rabbit hopping, Mama Rabbit eating, Mama Rabbit, Mama Rabbit, Mama Rabbit.
The next three shots are all one visit made at dawn on June 29, but are a good example of the photos we were getting.
Here she has just arrived at the nest; the camera shows 5:07am. It is still dark enough for infra-red.
By 5:14am, there was enough light for the camera to change to color. Mama Bunny is not dancing here, I think she is pulling aside the grass cap.
In the third photo, taken at 5:18am, she is, I believe, nursing the kits.
June 30 saw similar photos as seen before. It was the afternoon of July 1 when my son asked me if I had checked the camera for more photos. I hadn’t. I suggested he go ahead and do so while I finished watching a news report on TV. I had become so accustomed to seeing photos of a rabbit in the grass that I almost didn’t check in with Philip. When I did, I asked with a chuckle, “Any more photos of rabbits?” “We have new photos,” he answered, “but not of rabbits.” That increased my curiosity. “What have we got?” I hesitantly asked. “This” and he turned the computer screen my way.
“What the heck is that?” I asked a bit stunned. “Wait ‘till you see some more.” came Philip’s response.
“That is not a rabbit,” I said, partly to myself. “I know.” he replied.
“A Raccoon?” I asked.
“I think so.” said Philip. “Have you looked at the nest?” I asked. Philip just nodded “yes”. I didn’t have to ask the next question: was it empty. I knew the answer. The next photo confirmed that guess.
There were a number more Raccoon face or leg photos.
The last photo snapped at 1:44.21 am. It was of a raccoon leg.
“Wait.” Philip said. “There’s more.” At 3:11.34am, approximately 1.5 hours later, the camera was activated again. Once again, we found ourselves asking, “What is this?”
Did the raccoon return, send a friend, or what!? After a few more pics of a furry leg, or just the grass, we got this pic.
I found myself wanting to see this story through human eyes, wondering how the mama is getting along after her shock. Then I read an article about rabbits that said that, under certain conditions, mother rabbits will eat their own young.
Information like
that certainly puts things into perspective!
“It’s a Cruel World”.