T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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854.1 | Ask a Frenchman... :^) | BPSOF::EGYED | Per aspera ad astra | Wed Feb 01 1995 23:51 | 4 |
| I only know one in Paris whom a small street is named after. Never
heard about it anywhere else.
Nat
|
854.2 | | USCTR1::MERRITT_S | Kitty City | Thu Feb 02 1995 05:28 | 15 |
| A fisher cat is a wild cat who is known to hunt and kill alot
of domestic kitties. They are a big danger to our feline friends
because they have all the capabilities (ie..climb trees, is very
fast, fit's in tight spots, stronger teeth) then our domestic kitties.
I never saw a fisher cat...but I have seen pictures and if I remember
correctly they do have many features of a normal cat, but are bigger.
They also have a wilder look to them...kind of reminds me of a
combination of a cat/raccoon/beaver!!!
Last summer our local newspaper had stated that a fisher cat was spoted
in the Fitchburg area and that was the same area many cats had
disappeared. (sigh)
Sandy
|
854.3 | Weasel, or some other rodent-type? | HOTLNE::CORMIER | | Thu Feb 02 1995 06:02 | 5 |
| Isn't it part of the weasel family? I seem to recall it isn't a feline
at all, and it's real name is just "Fisher". I saw one stuffed at the
Spencer County Fair. Nasty looking animal, sort of fox-feline look to
it.
Sarah
|
854.4 | Fisher | LJSRV2::FEHSKENS | len - reformed architect | Thu Feb 02 1995 06:55 | 11 |
|
Sarah's right; the animal, which I believe is related to the badger, is
not a feline at all. They have a reputation for being quite ferocious.
I think they look a bit like a wolverine. I can get more information
tonight.
BTW, there is a *Fishing* cat, a small cat which dives for fish. More
information on this exotic (but true) feline) tomorrow.
len.
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854.5 | A very viscious predator, kills but won't eat it. | LJSRV2::FALLON | | Thu Feb 02 1995 07:20 | 8 |
| I will also back up that a Fischer is not a cat. It is in the
weasel,badger type family. There are many of them in Maine. It is an
animal that, I believe, generally lives in the woods. Yes, it is known
to be ferocious. I had heard of someone many years ago that owned one
as a pet. You know, raised from a kit. Very moody. Raccoons are the
same way. I wouldn't go near one with a ten foot pole! I've watched
them eat and get a hold of something they don't want you to have.
Karen
|
854.6 | Viscious.. | USCTR1::SCHILTON | MRO3-1/E9, DTN 297-7558 | Thu Feb 02 1995 07:29 | 10 |
| But, weasels and stoats are very small (squirrel-sized
or even smaller) with long, slender bodies. Wolverines
are big, can get up to about 50-60 lbs, and have a stockier
build, similar to a raccoon. They are all ferocious killers.
Fishers, a friend tells me, like porcupine. They will attack
quickly, before it rolls up, going for its face, then when
the procupine is all confused, the fisher goes for its belly.
Sue
|
854.7 | Details to Follow | LJSRV2::FEHSKENS | len - reformed architect | Thu Feb 02 1995 08:03 | 5 |
|
Fishers are big.
len.
|
854.8 | Small dog size | HOTLNE::CORMIER | | Thu Feb 02 1995 08:28 | 5 |
| The one I saw was about 35-40 pounds, about the size of a beagle (dog),
but longer. When I live on the coast of Maine for a summer, we were
warned by the local cops not to let our cat out at night because there
were fishers in the marsh woods that have been known to eat cats : (
Sarah
|
854.9 | Weasel-ish | WMOENG::NEUVONEN | | Thu Feb 02 1995 10:02 | 13 |
| When I lived in Athol our neighbors had a fisher cat take up
residence under their shed which borders the woods. Our cat
Peaches disappeared as well as 3 or 4 other cats that lived
in the house down the road.
I never did see it for myself, but according to our neighbor it
looked like a big weasel and moved FAST.
With all of the wild critters we've seen in my parents yard over
the years (bobcat, fox, coy dog, fisher cat) we all have indoor
only cats now.
Sharon
|
854.10 | screeeeeammmm! | DELNI::PROVENCHER | | Thu Feb 02 1995 13:13 | 14 |
| When I bought my house in the rural part of town, my neighbor, rest his
soul now, used to hunt them. He said back in the earlier part of the
century the town had a bounty on them as they were so vicious and would
kill all kinds of small livestock. So, when he was young, he could
pick up $30 a head for them. There are still a few left in the area,
but now that there are so many houses going up, I dont hear them any
more. He used to tell me about how they attacked his chickens, small
lambs, etc. He told me to listen at night when I first moved there,
and I would hear the unmistakable scream. Well, I did hear it! I
won't forget the first time I heard it...sounded like a woman being
attacked. It woke me right up and I bolted to the window, only to
realize it had a rythym and sound to it that could only be a fisher.
In fact, the next morning my neighbor asked if I heard it....
They are a weasel family member, not a cat.
|
854.11 | Hmmm... | WMOENG::NEUVONEN | | Fri Feb 03 1995 12:46 | 8 |
| Interesting!! We heard a scream one night that sounded like a woman.
My father and our doberman (who was afraid of her own shadow) went
down into the woods to see who had made the noise. Shortly after that
we saw the bobcat and figured that it was the bobcat we heard.
Hmmm... I wonder now if it could've been the fisher cat? They were
around in the same timeframe.
|
854.12 | Now I see the difference! | BPSOF::EGYED | Per aspera ad astra | Mon Feb 06 1995 00:34 | 13 |
| Well, sorry for my first reply here, as I joked about the thing... I
actually thought of the small diving kitty Len told about. I know this
animal you mentioned, I never knew you over there call it fishercat -
it has nothing to do with cats.
BTW, weasels have nothing to do with rodents (note .3) - except eating
them :^)
Hope all cats are safe from this fishercat over there. We do not have
this animal in HUngary - only in the Zoo. Not a very, erm, hm, kind,
erm, person.
Nat
|
854.13 | This'll stir things up | LASSIE::WHITE | Only buy tuna-safe dolphin products | Mon Feb 06 1995 11:25 | 7 |
| Rat-hole-alert,
Read somewhere, while I was camping in Baxter State Park in Maine, that
(contrary to VERY popular belief and a lot of "eye-witnesses") they do not kill
cats.
While hiking up there, I just missed seeing one. The 2 people hiking
with me saw it. Fast little sucka.
Dan
|
854.14 | Tree Otter Weasel Thing | LJSRV2::FEHSKENS | len - reformed architect | Mon Feb 06 1995 12:23 | 12 |
|
I looked up fishers this morning. They are often called "fisher
martens" (no reference to fisher cats); they are mustelids, most
closely related to martens. They look bigger than they are (big
thick coats), weigh up to 15-20 pounds. They are arborial (i.e.,
live in trees), but hunt on the ground. They are very successful
predators, also very secretive, rarely seen. Given this, I doubt they
prey on cats. From the picture, they have a head much like an otter
(and apparently, are often confused with otters), but stockier.
len.
|
854.15 | Thanks :-) | USCTR1::SCHILTON | MRO3-1/E9, DTN 297-7558 | Mon Feb 06 1995 12:43 | 5 |
| re >>Tree Otter Weasel Thing
That explains everything!!
Sue ;-)
|
854.16 | they are around in Maine still | CHORDZ::WALTER | | Mon Feb 06 1995 13:26 | 9 |
| Last year I was up in Lakeville Maine, close to the Canadian Border.
We went to a restaurant called the Log Cabin and they had a stuffed
Fisher Cat on one of the posts over our table.
I asked to be moved. It looked about 40 lbs. And, it spooked the heck
out of me.
FWIW,
cj
|
854.17 | Seen in Brookline, NH | MR2MI1::NERI | | Tue Feb 07 1995 07:54 | 8 |
| My neighbor told me she saw one. I don't like the idea of them coming so close
to the houses. But they have chickens. Something got a few of them last week.
I also know they're around in Barre, MA.
I think I'd prefer not to run into one.........
Diane
|
854.18 | | HELIX::SKALTSIS | Deb | Tue Feb 07 1995 08:06 | 7 |
| RE: somthing getting the chickens.
It could also have been something like a snow owl or a hawk. The hunter
birds are beeing seen more in residential areas as woodland and food
supply dry up.
Deb
|
854.19 | | USCTR1::SCHILTON | MRO3-1/E9, DTN 297-7558 | Tue Feb 07 1995 08:37 | 3 |
| Or a fox. I know we have some in Douglas...I've seen 'em.
Sue
|
854.20 | Porcupines Beware | LJSRV2::FEHSKENS | len - reformed architect | Tue Feb 07 1995 09:25 | 17 |
|
I read some more on fishers last night. Big males get as large as 20
pounds. Females are much smaller. Full grown males are about 2 feet lon
excluding their tail.
They are reputed to be the fastest animal in the trees - they can easily
catch squirrels. They nest on the ground, though, in hollow logs and such.
According to the distribution map, they are relatively rare in almost all
of Connecticut, eastern Massachusetts and southern New Hampshire. This
means they're typically found in western Massachusetts, Vermont,
northern New Hampshire, and Maine.
They are known for preying on porcupines, an ecological niche if I ever
saw one...
len.
|
854.21 | Overporcupined here... | BPSOF::EGYED | Per aspera ad astra | Thu Feb 09 1995 02:29 | 13 |
| Len, just not quite sure what you mean with ecological niche... Do you
mean that porcupines are rare? Sorry bothering you all, but one always
uses every occasion to improve his English - and I need it...
Nat :^)
PS. We have bunches of porcupines here, if it is the same or the like
animal as hedgehogs. We have two kind of thorny animals here (only
slightly differing form each other) and my dict says hedgehog to the
one and porcupine to the other. Every year I sight dozens of them, on
our summer boathouse's yard there lives a thorny pair with youngs each
year, we feed them and they let themselves even touch. (VERY carefully
we do this...)
|
854.22 | Slightly Mis-spoken | LJSRV2::FEHSKENS | len - reformed architect | Thu Feb 09 1995 06:49 | 13 |
|
Not that porcupines are rare, but rather that they have very few
predators, and an animal (like the fisher) that targets them
specifically is therefore somewhat unique ecologically. Strictly
speaking, the usage was inappropriate, for two reasons - first (and
primarily), fishers prey on other things besides porcupines, and were
porcupines to suddenly disappear, fishers would probably still get on
quite nicely. Second, porcupines are pretty well established, so even if
fishers were dependent on porcupines, there's little threat to fishers'
food supply suddenly vanishing.
len.
|
854.23 | Clear now. | BPSOF::EGYED | Per aspera ad astra | Fri Feb 10 1995 00:06 | 7 |
| Thanks, Len.
I have heard (and in a film also seen) how our foxes hunt and eat
porcupines: they roll them like a ball to some water pool, and then as
the porcupine has to unroll itself, it shall be eaten then.
Nat
|
854.24 | Fishers are back! | SHRCTR::SCHILTON | Does fuzzy logic tickle? | Mon Jun 05 1995 06:31 | 18 |
| Did anyone see the article in yesterday's Boston Globe regarding
the return of fishers to Massachusetts. The Division of Fisheries
and Wildlife estimate that there are probably as many here now as
when the Pilgrims landed.
It describes them as a "yard-long, busy-tailed cousin of the sable
and martin, with cat-like habits". It says in this area their
diets would consist of gray squirrels, raccoons, berries, fruits
and even grasshoppers. Porcupines make up the diet of those fishers
found in northern forests. Dens are up in trees, 20 feet up and the
kits make mewing sounds like kittens. Full grown they weigh 7-15
lbs and this study is tracking them with microchip tags attached
to the back of their necks.
..just bits and pieces from the article for those who didn't see
it.
Sue
|
854.25 | | POWDML::BYRNE_B | | Fri Jun 16 1995 08:38 | 2 |
| where did they say the general location of these fisher's are?
|
854.26 | Ummm... | SHRCTR::SCHILTON | Press any key...no, no, not that one! | Fri Jun 16 1995 08:54 | 7 |
| Large wooded areas/forests throughout Massachusetts
if I recall correctly, but I tossed the article a week
ago.
I was left with the impression that they are not all that rare.
Sue
|
854.27 | I saw one!! | SHRCTR::SCHILTON | Press any key..no,no,not that one! | Thu May 30 1996 06:49 | 14 |
| Well, I saw one!!
Sunday, 11:30 am, on Quaker St, coming into Upton from Northbridge.
It crossed the road app. 30 ft in front of my car!!! In broad
daylight!!
It was BIG, long, low (the whole length of his body & tail appeared
to practically drag on the ground!) and weighed about 20 lbs. It had
a long, bushy tail.
I was amazed!!!
Sue
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