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Muddy Valley Farm

~ Life on a tiny west coast hobby farm

Muddy Valley Farm

Category Archives: Wildlife

Patience

29 Sunday Oct 2017

Posted by Jodi in Farm Life, Seasons, Wildlife

≈ 2 Comments

TL;DR. People move in, cut down a forest, and move on.

A shallow line of tall Douglas firs, fringed along the crest of a small hill, with the sky behind. That’s the view from our bathroom window.

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Blacktop snakes up the hillside, past a large garage and through the firs, stopping at the double front doors of a massive west coast style home. I can’t see the house from my bathroom, but I’ve been up there, delivering misdirected mail, etc. So I know how the driveway ends.

We didn’t used to be able to see the driveway or garage from our place, or the sky behind the trees, the whole property was thickly forested.

But that changed two years ago, when the neighbours from hell moved in. Their middle school age children explored every inch of their new property on their dirt bikes and quads, all day long. Lucky kids. Unlucky neighbourhood.

Traffic on our narrow lane increased to the point where my DH started joking about the drug dealers down the road. It turned out they were running an illegal truck yard, with local landscapers, small jobbers and motorhome owners as their tenants.

Worst of all, they started cutting down the forest. The first time the chainsaws came out, I thought “Oh they are just getting a little light in, and maybe reducing the tree litter, they’ve got that big in-ground pool up there. Or maybe, sigh, building more dirt bike trails.” But as tree after tree came down, my unease grew.

On and on the felling went, week after week, a day here and a day there. Logging trucks showed up at least twice to cart loads of huge logs away, and the slash piles grew, keeping pace with the growing bald spot. They left Douglas Firs standing sentinel along the hill crest as if to screen their activities. These people literally paved paradise, to put up a parking lot.

(thanks Joni, it’s a great line.)

Then they torched the slash. Prudence wasn’t one of this family’s strong points either, and they simply lit the piles where they sat. The flames shot fifty feet into the air, and someone in the neighbourhood (not us!) called the fire department. The two big fire trucks took up our whole road, and it was a bit exciting around here while they put out the fires.

After the first few months, the kids stopped with the dirt bike noise. Thank goodness. I don’t know if another neighbour talked to them or whether they just grew bored of that game.

The second year they were here, they took out a bunch more trees, and built the slash piles too high, and yep, you guessed it, that story ended with big red fire trucks too.

Then this spring, in the space of a couple months, they sold and moved on.
Some very unobtrusive new neighbours moved in, and I don’t need to practice my patience with the neighbours any more.

The dawn this morning was beautiful out my bathroom window, all peachy orange fading to golden yellow sky, spiked by silent black trees. A few of them are dying now, I assume from shock, and day by day I watch them shift into their new reality as favourite raven perches, for a while at least, before they shift again and lay down for a long sleep.

And I think about these people who lived here for such a short time, and the lasting mark they made. A mark that will take a hundred years to erase.
It’s quite something, isn’t it.

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Mink in the Barnyard!

14 Monday Aug 2017

Posted by Jodi in Chance, Chickens, Wildlife

≈ Leave a comment

TL;DR Mink chases chickens, dogs chase mink, no one catches anyone.

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Sunny Saturday morning. Sipping my coffee and hanging around the barnyard, chickens breakfasting and softly conversing amongst themselves, when an ungodly yowling and snarling shatters our peace. What the heck?!?

In reply to my unasked question, a bolt of dark chocolate lightning erupts from under the Silkies’ coop and shoots towards the creek, triggering a wave of explosive chicken panic as it flashes down the line of coops.

Mink!!! Must have got pinched by the wire as it tried to force his way up into the Silkie pen.

I yell for dogs and K sends Liza. Then she runs for the big house, to get Chance. We all like to laugh at poor inept Chance, he usually just can’t compete. But there is one thing he is way better at than Liza, and that is rooting out little furry critters. It’s his proud ratter dog heritage.

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Over the next half hour, stealth alternates with panic as the cursed mink tries again; not once, not twice, but THREE MORE TIMES. We spend each few quiet minutes hunting, me in observation mode, piggybacking on Chance’s senses as he reconnoiters. He dashes here and there, sampling the breeze with his quivery nose, and then stopping stock still and listening so intently that his hunting flag of a tail gets forgotten and slowly subsides down.

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Every time he catches a fresh whiff or hears a minky slither his tail snaps back up, signalling both its direction and his progress.

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In these intervals Liza loses interest quickly, preferring to stand and stare hypnotically at the Silkies while Chance terriers up and down the creekside, busy at his work.

Then we catch another glimpse of manic furry plushness, twitching and flipping under a ledge, around a corner, through a pallet, behind the feed cans; feverish red eyes searching for a way in; so desperate to sink sharp fangs into hot, tasty chicken that it keeps coming back, even with human and dog defenders right there!

At each sighting Chance and Liza hurl themselves after the mink; growling, barking, furious hell hounds at first, simmering down to stereotypical bumblers as they get blocked by dense bush; outsmarted again by this crafty wild thing throwing them effortlessly off its trail.

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After a tumultuous half hour that leaves the flocks terrified but intact, and me weak-kneed and needing more coffee, the mink finally gives up and departs, perhaps to try its luck at the next coop on down the valley. As its scent fades away, Chance relaxes with satisfaction.

Everyone has their special talent, and loves the chance to excel, right Chance? Good job ratter dog!!!

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When a Chicken Growls

28 Friday Jul 2017

Posted by Jodi in Chickens, Farm Life, Wildlife

≈ Leave a comment

IMG_3980Our local predators know where all the chickens in the neighbourhood live, and drop by the barnyard often, to scout our defenses.

The eagles, turkey vultures, ravens and hawks attack from above, picking off one bird at a time. Our trees and roofed pens slow them down some, but they usually grab a few chicken dinners each year.

If they can get in, raccoons and mink will wipe out a whole coop in minutes. Chickens aren’t equipped for hand to hand combat. Mink, the little monsters, will stack the bodies in a neat pile. Mink are just plain weird, and wow they have crazy eyes. I know…I played chicken-tug-of-war with one last summer. The chicken didn’t make it, but I sure got a good look at the mink.

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In retrospect, I am happy that I ended up with a few smaller coops instead of one big one, because this way I will never lose my whole flock to a single ground troop assault. A predator would never be methodical enough to break into one coop after another.

Every afternoon around one o’clock, I let the flocks out to free range until dusk and when the sun sets, they put themselves to bed. Free ranging helps to keep them safer too. One or two might get nabbed, but good luck to any predator trying to chase forty chickens heading off at top speed in forty different directions. Strange as it sounds, I think my chickens might be safest when they are roaming free.

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The dogs and I are often out puttering in the barnyard when an eagle or raven flies over. And that is when something really cool happens. Our barnyard community, the birds, the dogs and me, all connect, and communicate, and react as a unit to the enemy at the gate.

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It’s usually a rooster who first raises the alarm, growling loud and long. We all know exactly what he means.  Others begin to echo him, and as the low rumbling chicken growl swells and rolls across the barnyard, everyone freezes. A pause ensues while we each pinpoint the threat and then we all snap into action.

The birds under cover stand stock still. The birds out in the open swerve for cover, while Chance and Liza run out from under the trees and give chase, craning their necks to keep the bad guy in sight, and barking hysterically at the threat high above them. I get into the act too, raising my arm and in my best growly voice ordering the predator to be gone. This has no effect on anything, but it makes me feel useful, and a part of the high drama playing out around me.

The dogs are usually enough to send the enemy on his way, and then we all settle back down, satisfied at having vanquished the threat once again.

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Cistern Snail, Again

04 Tuesday Jul 2017

Posted by Jodi in Farm Life, Gardening, Wildlife

≈ Leave a comment

I am not sure if this guy was in the watering can or the cistern, but after I dipped, filled and emptied, there he was! Snails are so pretty, I  can’t hurt them, I just relocate them. Yes, I know, I’m a softie.

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