Lana and I have been throwing our food scraps into the back
yard since we moved to our home outside Abita Springs. Why throw biodegradables
in a landfill when they can at the least make mulch in your back yard, or
perhaps feed local critters. Besides the birds, we soon began to attract
possums, raccoons, and a fox at times. The raccoons have become our number one
customers and for the past three years we’ve been seeing moms in the summer
coming with babies in toe. This year, for the first time, we’ve got two mommas,
one with two kits and the other with four.
Today, for the first time, we had both mommas and their
families at the same time. We’re pretty sure the moms are from among the groups
of babies from the last couple of years, which most likely makes them sisters.
They are used to seeing each other in the yard and don’t fight among
themselves, but I thought there might be fireworks today with the kits in tow.
No problem, however. When the second set of kits came out of the woods, several
members of the first set went tearing off to investigate and soon they were all
playing together. It was fun to see.
Lana and I were both wondering why we find the little raccoons
so adorable. Both kittens and puppies exhibit the characteristic big eyes and
flat faces of human babies, thus making them resemble us a little bit more.
Young raccoons look like miniature versions of the adults, without the flat
faces. I think, though, it’s partly the playfulness and kind of goofiness of
the young coons that Lana and I respond to. And they have so much energy. They
never walk anywhere. They run, and in running they almost hop. They wrestle
each other and explore every nook and cranny around them. In that way they’re
more like human children.
Anyway, I’ll leave you with a few pics of our cooners for
your enjoyment.
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