Hola everyone!
A few weeks ago we suffered through another nasty cold snap in southeast Wisconsin. One bitterly cold (windchills below zero F) but bright and sunny afternoon I opened up the patio door to toss out another hand-full of hazel nuts for my tribe of squirrels, who were feeding more than usual in order to keep their bodies fueled against the cold. There, on the steps leading down to the patio, was a squirrel that did not run away when I opened the door. I could see it was not one of my "regulars" as it was smaller and darker than my usual tribe members. It totally ignored me, in fact, like I wasn't even there.
That is when I realized it was either a baby or a sick squirrel, maybe even a blind and deaf squirrel, on his/her last legs. I would roll a nut right in front of it and it would crawl right over it, like it didn't see it, that's why I thought for several days that it was blind.
It kept showing up in the yard. It was either very young and injured (young enough not to know that humans can be dangerous and evil and young enough not to instantly recognize a hazel nut) or very old and weak. It did not move like a squirrel and was unsteady on its feet, so I suspected it might have the "tipping over" disease that I occasionally witnessed in squirrels at the former Maison Newton over the years.
The other squirrels pretty much left it alone. Thankfully, starting last Saturday the weather turned well above freezing during the day and the snow is slowly melting away. The squirrel came every day and foraged for nuts. In the afternoon sun last weekend it laid out on top of the fence railing and slept, soaking in healing and warming rays.
And then, yesterday, the squirrel did not appear. I waited all day, looking and looking, but did not see it at all.
I thought it must have died, and my heart broke a little. I know it is the way of nature, but it still hurts.
I checked for sight of him again this morning first thing, but did not see him. He has a distinct way of moving, and I did not see him among the other squirrels.
But a short while ago I looked up from the kitchen table out the patio door and there he was, sitting on top of the snow where the bird seed lands and the sun has not yet melted through the snow to the concrete below, eating the sunflower seeds in the bird seed mixture just as fast as he could find them! Relief - and gratitude that he is still alive.
I grabbed my camera and managed to get some photos of him. I tried not to spook him; even the squirrels who are very familiar with me do not like to have their photos taken and will run away if I stand at the open patio door too long. This squirrel seemed oblivious!
Being able to see the squirrel close-up in the sunlight, I saw that he has an injury on his left leg above his paw, and he is favoring the left front leg/paw, so essentially, he is surviving on two legs and his right leg/paw! In the photo above, you can see the left paw looks shriveled. You can see the area above the shrunken paw has matted fur and while it is not possible to tell from the photo, I could see that he must have either been hit by a car or had a run in with a predator but managed to escape. The skin had been broken and he is missing a patch of fur.
Brave little guy, and thank Goddess he found sanctuary in my yard. I don't know where he was yesterday, I'm just happy he found his way back today, and has been busy eating the additional peanuts and hazelnuts I've been tossing out to him, which he now recognizes as food!
He is moving MUCH better today -- he is moving around more like a normal squirrel (getting strength back?), so the warmer weather, the sun, and probably the food he's getting enough of here are, I hope, putting him on the path toward a full recovery.
By being able to observe him this close-up, I could see that he favored the left leg/paw. The photo above was the next one I quickly snapped in the sequence -- you can see the damage to his upper left side above his paw area. But, look - he's getting chubby! When he first appeared he was so wizened and thin. See all of the snow still left on my patio area -- and even more snow in the front yard that faces west and the sun not yet high enough up in the sky to reach it with melting sunshine. If the weather does hold for two full weeks as forecast, I hope ALL of this snow will be gone!
As the snow has been slowly melting I've been going out with my broom to sweep up the nutshells freed from the ice and snow cover -- feeding squirrels leads to rather a big mess on one's patio!
In the photo above, you can see the difference between the size of the healthy right front leg and paw and the left side. Isn't he cute, my little gimpy squirrel. I hope he heals and survives.
Tuesday, March 10, 2015
Saturday, March 7, 2015
Squirrels Acting Nuts -- Squirrel Crazy Dancing
Hola and happy weekend everyone!
You know I'm a squirrel nut -- I nurture and fed a large tribe for 24 years at the former Maison Newton and am doing the same here at the new maison. In the northeast corner of my backyard are two large clumps of arborvitae that have grown nearly as tall as a telephone pole and there are a couple of squirrel nests inside the thick foilage, very much concealed from prying eyes because the arborvitaes are evergreen. Because of how sunshine and wind come into the fenced backyard, the ground underneath the arborvitae clumps is bare, and it is not uncommon on a sunny afternoon even in bitter cold to see a squirrel or two stretched out on the layer of dead leaves that I put down last autumn to "melt" away during the winter, soaking up the warm sunshine. This morning as I sipped my coffee and watched the first group of squirrels come for their morning hazel nuts, peanuts and sunflower seeds just after sun rise, I noticed a squirrel doing a "crazy dance" on the bare ground beneath the arborvitaes!
I've seen this kind of behavior many times over the past 25 years; I sat down at the computer and, not sure how to describe the behavior, did a google search under "squirrel doing sommersaults and acting crazy" and sure enough, up popped lots of results, LOL! I found this website -- backyardsquirrels.com -- please check it out, it is a hoot! -- and this video:
This kind of show presented to us by Mother Nature is exactly why I find my squirrels so entertaining!
You know I'm a squirrel nut -- I nurture and fed a large tribe for 24 years at the former Maison Newton and am doing the same here at the new maison. In the northeast corner of my backyard are two large clumps of arborvitae that have grown nearly as tall as a telephone pole and there are a couple of squirrel nests inside the thick foilage, very much concealed from prying eyes because the arborvitaes are evergreen. Because of how sunshine and wind come into the fenced backyard, the ground underneath the arborvitae clumps is bare, and it is not uncommon on a sunny afternoon even in bitter cold to see a squirrel or two stretched out on the layer of dead leaves that I put down last autumn to "melt" away during the winter, soaking up the warm sunshine. This morning as I sipped my coffee and watched the first group of squirrels come for their morning hazel nuts, peanuts and sunflower seeds just after sun rise, I noticed a squirrel doing a "crazy dance" on the bare ground beneath the arborvitaes!
I've seen this kind of behavior many times over the past 25 years; I sat down at the computer and, not sure how to describe the behavior, did a google search under "squirrel doing sommersaults and acting crazy" and sure enough, up popped lots of results, LOL! I found this website -- backyardsquirrels.com -- please check it out, it is a hoot! -- and this video:
This kind of show presented to us by Mother Nature is exactly why I find my squirrels so entertaining!
Friday, March 6, 2015
Goddesschess News: The Moscow Open (Tournament B - Women's Chess Ghetto)
Hola darlings!
As far as I have been able to determine from the website for the 2015 Russian Open, only males are allowed to play in the "A" Tournament. Female players are relegated to "B" and below. Well, figures. There are a lot of hungry Russian chessplayers these days who cannot afford to travel outside the country, so they flock to events like this one, and male players greatly out-number female players. The Russian Open used to be a far-more well-funded international event, attracting top-level players from around the world. These days, not so much.
As you know, I don't give a fig about men's events but the ladies, yes, they are important to track, and not only because of their gender. What is going on in the world as a whole is reflected in the miniscule world of chess, only greatly magnified. Who suffers first? Always women and children. So take a look at this list of all of the female players from the 2015 Moscow (NOT SO OPEN) Tournament - the "B" Event, and draw your own conclusions. "RR" equals Russian Rubles, which are STILL falling relative to international currency standards, despite the relative stablization of the price of a barrel of oil the past couple of weeks -- but this has happened after the tournament concluded -- wonder if the players actually got paid???
Warning: The Women's "B" Tournament Results is in Russian alphabetic script and I can't read a damn word, so I may be reporting average Siberian temperatures for the past 50 years:
As far as I have been able to determine from the website for the 2015 Russian Open, only males are allowed to play in the "A" Tournament. Female players are relegated to "B" and below. Well, figures. There are a lot of hungry Russian chessplayers these days who cannot afford to travel outside the country, so they flock to events like this one, and male players greatly out-number female players. The Russian Open used to be a far-more well-funded international event, attracting top-level players from around the world. These days, not so much.
As you know, I don't give a fig about men's events but the ladies, yes, they are important to track, and not only because of their gender. What is going on in the world as a whole is reflected in the miniscule world of chess, only greatly magnified. Who suffers first? Always women and children. So take a look at this list of all of the female players from the 2015 Moscow (NOT SO OPEN) Tournament - the "B" Event, and draw your own conclusions. "RR" equals Russian Rubles, which are STILL falling relative to international currency standards, despite the relative stablization of the price of a barrel of oil the past couple of weeks -- but this has happened after the tournament concluded -- wonder if the players actually got paid???
Warning: The Women's "B" Tournament Results is in Russian alphabetic script and I can't read a damn word, so I may be reporting average Siberian temperatures for the past 50 years:
Итоговое положение после 9 туров
Аннотация:
Доп1: Buchholz Tie-Breaks (variabel with parameter) Доп2: Buchholz Tie-Breaks (variabel with parameter) Доп3: The greater number of victories |
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