T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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4366.1 | | SANDY::FRASER | Monsters remonstrated... | Fri Feb 08 1991 13:36 | 8 |
|
That's beautiful! You're so lucky to have experienced that :^}
Fwiw, check out Robert Frost's poem, "Two Look at Two" (at least
I think that's the name of it - if not it's close). It describes
an incident similar to yours :^}
Sandy
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4366.2 | | MRKTNG::MITCHELL_V | | Fri Feb 08 1991 16:28 | 19 |
|
Lynne, I had the same experience once. I was getting ready for work
one day and happened to look out the bathroom window and I spotted a
buck walking very timidly in our field. It was great because the
setting was perfect -- the sun was just over the horizon and the grass
was green and there was an early morning dew. I love seeing things
like that.
Last year I spotted a young bear and thought it was a dog (identity
crisis). I followed the bear in my car until it ran in the woods.
And last month I picked up a baby owl in the road. I think the baby
tried to spread it's wings and didn't make it to far. I wished I could
of kept the baby owl....it was soooo cute.
Regards,
Val
Val
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4366.3 | | AIMHI::OFFEN | | Mon Feb 11 1991 12:15 | 8 |
| That definitely had to be a *fantastic sight*. I saw some in a field
one morning and just had to stop and watch them. I love nature and
all the four-legged creatures that are a part of it. I also stop
for sun-rises and sun-sets too.
Sandi (alias nature-freak)
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4366.4 | | TENAYA::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Mon Feb 11 1991 14:48 | 6 |
| Last night I heard some running around noises on my roof, and figured
it was the neighbor's cat playing, but after awhile I went out and
looked, saying to myself, please, lord, not root rats (which are
endemic to our area, just what I need rats in the attic), but it
was two baby racoons playing tag! cute as buttons.
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4366.5 | My Geese...a similar experience w/nature... | DELNI::JMCDONOUGH | | Tue Feb 12 1991 09:07 | 35 |
| Ain't nature wonderful??
Being born and raised on a fairly large farm in Minnesota, I grew up
"in the woods" and at an early age was instilled by my father with a
real appreciation of nature and her beauty...I have never lost that and
will not...
A year ago I was driving from Marlboro to Worcester on Rte 290, and
I noticed all the traffic slowing down....as I approached the area I
noticed a Doe and her spotted Fawn slowly running parallel to the
highway in the ditch... Traffic had sense enough to slow and not
startle her...and as I got near her she turned 90 degrees and, followed
by her fawn, disappeared into much safer grounds---the woods...
I am a fervent if not luch=ky fisherman... A few years ago I used to
frequent an area which will remain unnamed.. During the spring of the
year, as I was walking through a wooded area to my fishing spot...and I
froze in my tracks when I heard a loud 'hissing' sound... Upon scanning
the area, I discoverred a Canadian Goose on her nest.. Softly talking
to her, I was able to calm her sufficiently so she didn't leave her
eggs... Since I had been successful in not scaring her, she seemed to
sense that I meant her no harm.. I went back many times that spring,
and she got to the point that she's actually "talk" to me when I
approached...softly warbling as if in greeting. After her eggs hatched,
I was "allowed" to approach within around 5 feet without her or her
goslings showing the least bit of alarm or fear. She proudly raised 9
beautiful goslings, and after leaving the nest and becoming waterborne,
they'd surround me and 'peck' at me whenever I went there fishing.. I
didn't really care if I caught any fish that spring..I was more
satisfied to have these wild creatures form some sort of 'bond' with me
than anything....
I've never told anyone except my wife about this...didn't actually
have anyone who I thought would be interested in hearing about
this....until now..
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4366.6 | | JJLIET::JUDY | Born to be a beach bum | Tue Feb 12 1991 09:35 | 18 |
|
re: .5
That is a wonderful story!
re: Roberta ??
Aren't baby raccoons adorable? While in HS I was in a group
call Explorers. Technically I was a Boy Scout =) Well my
post would go up to the summer camp to help out in the general
store or to help out with the cub scouts. One year when we
were up a couple of the guys and found a few baby raccoons
and brought them back to the 'store'. The babies had a great
time! They'd climb up our legs, sit on our shoulders and nibble
on our ears....ooh how that tickled! I didn't want to leave!
JJ
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4366.7 | Baby racoons are a panic!! | DELNI::JMCDONOUGH | | Tue Feb 12 1991 12:51 | 23 |
| Re .6
About 10 years ago I visited an MDC Zoo where I knew someone who
worked there... At the time they had about 15 orphaned baby
racoons....and all of them were in an open area surrounded by a moat...
In the group of racoons was also a single orphaned Coati-Mundi....the
little ring-tailed Mexican and South American "cousin" of the racoon.
Chester---the Coati---was only about 1/2 the size of the baby racoons,
but this little guy "ran the roost".
Since I had a "connection" in the Zoo, I was allowed to climb down
into the habitat and contact the "kids".....what an experience!! I was
'frisked' and robbed of everything in my pocets in around five-seconds
flat...about 5 or 6 of these little guys were all over
me..."chirrr'ing" away all the while. But when "Chester" decided to
take over and see what I had that may be of interest, and the baby
racoons moved over to let him have his way... Chester had the NEATEST
way of taking a cigarette and stripping the paper off in one quick
move...scattering the tobacco all over...
I think baby raccons are very cute...thay have "hands" just like we
do, and the baby Coati was adorable...but then....all baby animal
are....yes...even baby pigs!!
JM
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4366.8 | I've got Canadians too! | ESIS::FEASE | Andrea Midtmoen Fease | Tue Feb 12 1991 14:41 | 35 |
| Re. .5
You too? Last year we had a pair of Canadian Geese at the pond
here at DLB12 in Marlboro. They started out walking around in the
parking lot, and soon I had them eating bread out of my hand.
Soon after, one of the geese disappeared. I wondered where she
had gone, but saw the other in the pond. He refused to come up to the
lot, so I went down to him to feed him. Soon it dawned on me that the
missing one was a female, and she was no doubt on eggs. Since
Canadians are monogamous, I knew that as long as that male was around,
she was still around too.
About the time I figured the eggs should hatch, the male
disappeared too. I worried for a week - no geese. Then after that
week, here he came ... with four goslings and the mother in tow! The
goslings didn't have any fear at all, although the mother started the
old hissing routine.
Two weeks later one of the goslings was gone. But by then I had
the father and remaining goslings eating out of the hand; the mother
would eat, but I had to throw it to her. Three months later another
gosling disappeared - that one hurt because it was so old. About two
weeks after that I managed to lead them all back up to the parking lot
to eat; I took pictures of them that day. The next day they were gone
- flown south.
I've been waiting all winter, wondering if they would come back
again, and whether they would all make it. Two weeks ago a flock of
four Canadians came to the pond and, since they come when I call, they
are definitely mine. The father's got a band on his leg, but other
than that they are unscathed! I'm hoping for more little ones in the
spring 8-) .
- Andrea
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