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Conference turris::womannotes-v1

Title:ARCHIVE-- Topics of Interest to Women, Volume 1 --ARCHIVE
Notice:V1 is closed. TURRIS::WOMANNOTES-V5 is open.
Moderator:REGENT::BROOMHEAD
Created:Thu Jan 30 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 30 1995
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:873
Total number of notes:22329

731.0. "A Very Strange Experience" by VIKING::TARBET (Clorty Auld Besom) Sat Feb 20 1988 20:50

    I had a peculiar experience this afternoon that has left me feeling
    a little disturbed.  Has anyone ever heard a squirrel cry like an
    upset cat?
    
    I'd been shopping in Harvard Square and was walking back toward the
    Cambridge library where I parked my car.  Just before I reached there,
    I heard what sounded like a cat crying and I stopped and started
    looking around.  A guy coming the other way did the same thing, the cry
    was really quite loud.  We finally located it as coming from a squirrel
    about 10 feet off the ground on the limb of a tree, and there was no
    mistake either because we could watch her/his mouth open in synchrony
    with the cry.  Very desolate sounding.  The guy who'd also stopped to
    search said that he'd been sure it was a cat and he'd never heard
    anything like it from a squirrel in his life. 
    
    There didn't seem anything unhealthy about the animal, I scuttled
    back to the market and bought a tin of unsalted peanuts just in
    case it was starving, but it didn't seem unusually ravenous (hungry
    and willing to eat, but not in a throw-caution-to-the-winds state).
    
    I don't mind telling you that I still feel a bit shaken.  Can anyone
    shed any light? 
    
    						=maggie
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731.1RANCHO::HOLTRobert A. HoltSat Feb 20 1988 23:127
    
    Maybe it was a belligerent male squirrel letting all the
    other male squirrels know that the Square is *his* territory
    (along with any F squirrels therein). Or maybe the squirrel
    was defending its family from a cat... only a guess.
    
    Wheres Marty Stouffer when you need him?
731.2observationsHEFTY::CHARBONNDWhat a pitcher!Mon Feb 22 1988 08:015
    I've heard that frequently from the squirrels around the house -
    sometimes a warning of an approaching cat, or a distress cry when
    they're separated from their mates. I spooked one away from his
    nest at dusk one evening and he cried 'til I went away and let
    him sneak in (I watched from a window).    
731.3maybe...LEZAH::BOBBITTis it soup yet?Mon Feb 22 1988 09:465
    Maybe humans aren't the only things that feel lost and alone in 
    the middle of the often-impersonal hustle and bustle of the city...
    
    -Jody
    
731.4It's Probably NaturalBASVAX::HAIGHTMon Feb 22 1988 15:4712
    Squirrels, especially males, are territorial.  One male squirrel
    may nip at another in a most sensitive spot (you get my drift) for
    males, and it can cause severe discomfort and even a small amount
    of bleeding for the short term.  Territorialism is greatest in the
    early spring when the males are establishing there "castles", selected
    because of 1) the present female squirrel visitations or 2) the
    possibility of attracting females because of the good nesting
    environment.  Could be this one was a victim of another's instinct.
                                 
    (We had a squirrel battle in our back yard one year that used to
    send our dog into a tizzy because he thought he heard cats, too!
    Our vet explained this "squirrely behavior" to us...)
731.5RE: .0 ... Animal screams can be very disturbing, indeed...NEXUS::CONLONMon Feb 22 1988 23:1819
    	If a squirrel screaming in pain sounds anything like the noise
    	a cat can make when it is in extreme pain, it's no wonder you
    	found it so disturbing.
    
    	About 6 years ago, my cat had an illness that caused him severe
    	abdominal pain (enough to have him screaming by the time I got
    	home from work.)  It was the worst sound I've ever heard (except
    	for the sound of a small child in pain.)
    
    	His cry brought me to tears (especially knowing that there was
    	nothing I could say to make him feel better and no way to ask
    	him where it hurt.)  We rushed him to an animal hospital instead
    	(and he is now 10 years old and quite healthy.)
    
    	If the squirrel was eating, the injury (or whatever) was probably
    	not life-threatening.  When my cat was sick, all it took was
    	"being sniffed" by our other cat to send him into torrents of
    	agonizing screams.  He wouldn't have considered eating or drinking
    	anything in that condition.
731.6ours do it every yearVIA::RANDALLback in the notes life againMon Feb 29 1988 10:088
    Re: .0 --
    
    The squirrels in our yard back yard (we have a quarter-acre lot, about
    half treed) do this every year when the snow starts to go away and the
    days get longer -- it's a very distressing sound but it seems to be
    related to mating or territory rather than pain or loss. 
    
    --bonnie
731.7VIKING::TARBETClorty Auld BesomMon Feb 29 1988 14:208
    I'm really glad for the reassurance, guys...that animal had me worried!
    
    What's really hysterical is that there were always dozens of squirrels
    living around the house back home, and later on the campus the same,
    and I positively cannot remember *ever* hearing anything of the
    like.  Weird.
    
    						=maggie
731.8RANCHO::HOLTRobert A. HoltWed Mar 02 1988 13:512
    
    Movie idea of the week: Revenge of the Killer Squirrels...
731.9HANDY::MALLETTSituation hopeless but not seriousWed Mar 02 1988 14:3532
    re: .8
    
    I *know* I shouldn't do this. . .
    
    but. . .
    
    Ooooo, yeah.  Like, one of them lures hapless victims (why don't
    victims ever have any hap?) by sounding like injured, cute little
    kittens, then all their vengeful squirrel buddies whomp said victims
    to death with radioactive acorns.  And that's only fair 'cos it
    was humankind's tampering with nature which resulted in the radio-
    active acorns in the first place (and they in turn caused the 
    mutation which a) gives the killer-squirrels their intelligence
    and b) let's them howl like kittens.  
    
    And for victims we should have some irresponsible teenagers (played 
    by people in their 30's) who lied to their parents and went out to
    Squirrel Woods to neck instead of going to the library to study
    like they said.  The female teenagers should get iced when they go
    for the obligatory nude swim in Squirrel Pond (after drinking 
    and doing "it") and the male teenagers should have cute faces, nice
    buns and pass out (after drinking and doing "it").  They (the "boys")
    will then wake up and tell the fat, deceitful head of the Chamber
    of Commerce that it wasn't a boating accident, but this very pompous
    money-grubber won't believe it (word of such a thing could spoil
    the summer tourist trade).  Justice will be served tho' as this
    fool gets his when he tries to kill the good-kid teenagers who
    were going to blow the whistle; he chases them (on their way home
    from the library) into Squirrel Park.  They come out, but he doesn't.
    
    Cecil B. DeMallett
    
731.10why victims never have any hapVIA::RANDALLback in the notes life againWed Mar 02 1988 16:0516
    Re: .9
    
    "Hap" means "fortune" or "chance" -- not in the sense of fate but
    in the sense of a random happening, a coincidence perhaps, that's
    good for you, makes you happy.  (Notice that the previous explanation
    includes three words derived from "hap": "perhaps" meaning "by chance".
    You can probably figure out the other two by yourselves.
    
    So if the victim had any hap, he or she wouldn't be there in the
    first place.  Sort of a self-selecting sample.
    
    --bonnie
    
    p.s. I loved it!  It will be a blockbuster!  Can I play the Jamie
    Lee Curtis part?  I have brown hair!
    
731.11funny how such an innocent question can...HEFTY::CHARBONNDWhat a pitcher!Thu Mar 03 1988 06:482
    re.0, re.9 &.10 Now, don't you wish you'd called the Audubon
    society instead ?  :-)
731.12VIKING::TARBETClorty Auld BesomThu Mar 03 1988 08:187
    <--(.11)
    
    One of the things I love most about our community, Dana.  We have
    positively got some of the craziest, most creative people in the
    world!
    
    						=maggie
731.1357584::BOYAJIAN$50 never killed anybodyFri Mar 04 1988 06:108
    re:.10
    
    Now, Bonnie, admit it. You only want the Jamie Lee Curtis part
    because (a) she's the only one who doesn't have to do the
    obligatory nude scene, and thus (b) is the only one who makes
    it out of the movie alive.
    
    --- jerry
731.14actually a nude scene would be funVIA::RANDALLback in the notes life againFri Mar 04 1988 12:187
    re: .13
    
    No, I want the Jamie Lee Curtis part because I am trying to
    debug a Fortran program and I would welcome a few excuses to
    scream the roof down!
    
    --bonnie
731.15mutant hacker teenage squirrels3D::CHABOTRooms 253, &#039;5, &#039;7, and &#039;9Fri Mar 04 1988 14:094
    Hmmm, maybe that's what the squirrel was expressing:
    !@#$%^&*() FORTRAN!
    
    :-)  :-)  :-)  :-)  :-)
731.16RANCHO::HOLTRobert A. HoltSat Mar 05 1988 13:403
    
    They were filming a Japanese monster thriller. Sort of
    a 'Rodan' of the Square.
731.17Getting squirrely...ASD::LOWNuke the Swiss and Steal Their GoldTue Mar 08 1988 12:5911
   Re: .16
    
    >        They were filming a Japanese monster thriller. Sort of
    >    a 'Rodan' of the Square.
          
    If it were about the squirrel, shouldn't it be "Rodent" of the square?
    
    :-)  :-)
    
    Dave