"Tree rats", "rats with bushy tails", "pests', "vermin".
First of all, what is wrong with rats? I can feel my question send ripples of disgust among you. "Eek!", "Yuck!" I hear you exclaim, your lips twisted in revulsion. Rats are dirty – you say – the live in sewers and run along polluted river banks, and spread disease. I reply – rats could not thrive without human dirt and disease. And who is responsible for those? Humans, who generate more detritus than any other creature on the planet. As for being "pests", I have come across several many humans whom I could accurately describe as such, but no animals.
In England, the grey squirrel is viewed as Public Enemy No. 1. Express affection for grey squirrels, and you are answered with a contemptuous narrowing of the eyes and rebuked for loving the criminals responsible for the demise of the native red squirrels. One vital fact is omitted. North American squirrels did not fly nor swim en masse across the Atlantic. They were purposefully introduced here in the 19th Century... By humans (and once again, the tune from Dukas's Sorcerer's Apprentice rings in my ears).
I love grey squirrels. Moreover, I admire them. Granted – they can be spiteful but carry out their revenge on you with a great deal of charm. They knock down your bird feeder or pee on your windowsill (generally as a reprisal for your failing in your duty to provide food), and always linger to watch your reaction with an invariable expression of irresistible cuteness. The grey squirrel does not take no for an answer. Once it is fiercely determined to appropriate your box of corn flakes, then you might as well stand aside and watch the creature drag the cardboard box along the kitchen table, and heave it onto the windowsill (I speak from personal experience). Now that's focus.
I first became acquainted with squirrels when I lived in Cambridge, about twenty years ago. They were regular visitors at our sloped-ceilinged attic flat on Cranmer Road, which they reached by climbing up the drain pipe before running up onto the roof. If the windows were locked, they tapped on the glass pain to request admittance, and waited with intermittent – somewhat impatient – flicks of the tail. After a few weeks, I learnt to tell them apart by their markings, size and battle scars, and gave them names. Ariel, Lysander, Desdemona (she had weepy eyes), Tybalt (he always got into scraps), and Ginger (a pale carrot albino). Occasionally, they would chase each-other up and down the living room curtains, at which point I would chase them out.
How can you fail to have affection and admiration for a creature so agile, so manipulative (that takes intelligence), so wilful, so tenacious, and so resourceful? The grey squirrel is the Scapin, the Figaro, the Truffaldino and the Gianni Schicchi of the animal world – and we are conquered by the latter ones' charm and audacity.
At the end of Puccini's only comic opera, Gianni Schicchi addresses the audience. He tells us that his cheating made Dante consign him to Hell. If, however, we have enjoyed the performance, he asks us to provide him with mitigating circumstances... By giving him a round of applause.
And so the grey squirrel stands up on its hind legs and lifts a paw to its chest. Me – a criminal? It seems to say, and stares at us with black, liquid eyes that glisten with innocent intensity. Let us find mitigating circumstances for its cheekiness, and reward it with a nut or two.
Actually, who wants nuts when you can have Swiss chocolate!
© Scribe Doll
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Wonderful portrayal of the
Wonderful portrayal of the humble yet crafty old squirrel, Katherine. Sadly, no squirrels here but I do see them in Dublin when I visit the city parks. I wonder why they don't inhabit this environment. Are they mostly urban creatures? m
Hello, Mary, my friend –
Hello, Mary, my friend – where have you been? Lovely to see you commenting. I have seen squirrels in the countryside, here, but I guess the little scroungers have decided it's more effortless to get fed by human suckers for cuteness.
Something positive!
What lovely photographs! Fascinating post. We have a Grey Squirrel who inhabits our garden ... but I have to admit that those Red ones are adorable!
Thank you for commenting,
Thank you for commenting, Caroline. I have never seen a red squirrel. In Italy, in the Appenines, I have come across clack ones, with tufty ears and a white fron – like an orchestra conductor.
We have gray squirrels here
We have gray squirrels here too--I've seen them scampering across the rooftop of my neighbour's house--they're amazing how they figure out their fence-bush-tree-roof route! I've also seen a number of brown squirrels and all of them--both grays and browns--are busy gathering up the nuts from the oak trees. The locals have predicted a very cold Winter here as the squirrels have such a heavy coat of fur. . .Great photos and great blog, Katherine!
Thank you so much, Judee.
Thank you so much, Judee. Glad you enjoyed my piece.
Enjoyable piece ~
Thanks for speaking up for our neighbors, the gray squirrel. I'm always non-plussed by those denigrating them so I'm pleased you had the courage to give give them some positive PR. That was a great tale of your housemates.
My sister-in-law once had a gray squirrel neighbor who visited her each morning when my sister-in-law slipped out to have her morning hot chocolate with whipped cream. It became her habit to share some with the squirrel, a practice both enjoyed for years.
I hope you've seen "Daylight Robbery," about squirrels' efforts to reach food. If not, here is a link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uY9Yf26J4ZM
Cheers
Yes, I saw that programme
Yes, I saw that programme years ago, on the BBC, I think. Brilliant. At one point, there was a commercial with a squirrel doing an assault course to reach food, to the soundtrack of Mission Impossible. I like animals who are tricksters. It takes intelligence to trick. Thank you for commenting, Michael :–)
Yes!
As author of The Leadership Secrets of Squirrels, I have to applaud your defense of my favorite mammal. Way to go!
Hurray for the grey squirrel!
Hurray for the grey squirrel! Thank you for commenting.