[eastern fox squirrel (Sciurus niger)]
Tag Archives: fox squirrel (Sciurus niger)
I’m SOOOOO scared
Jenny and I spoke several weeks ago about how familiar I was growing with the individual animals who regularly grace me with their presence. Whether discussing raccoons or opossums or cats or armadillos or squirrels or whatever, the more I watch the various creatures that come through these parts, the more I am able to recognize them based on both physical and non-physical traits. I’ve been amazed, in fact, by the diversity of personalities I see.
There are those who care very little about my presence, those who distrust me completely but tolerate my presence so long as there’s food, and even those who totally freak out and can’t stand to be around me (I try not to take it personally). There are those who ask me for food, those who have no clue where it comes from even if they’re standing right there when I put it out, and those who are sure I’m trying to poison them with the edible trinkets. I could go on.
Whether it’s the newly discovered five-baby nursery of raccoons small enough to walk through the fence without effort or any number of their older and bigger cousins, or it’s the various baby and adult opossums coming through, or it’s the really big nine-banded armadillo who marches uncaringly through the world as though he owns everything, or some other part of the wildlife menagerie that is now so common here, I day by day grow more capable of recognizing the individuals and predicting successfully what to expect from them. It’s more than entertaining; it’s amazing.
I said all of that to introduce this little guy. He’s one of the many squirrels I’ve induced to visit me regularly. There are some of these “tree rats” who know I feed them and come to the fence and practically beg for something to eat. In fact, at least one of them has taken almonds directly out of my hand. There are others who will move away to a safe distance while I put treats on the ground. There are even some who totally freak out and run like idiots to whatever cover they can find. This video is of one that fits in the last group.
I can’t say I’ve recognized this squirrel’s gender. Some are obvious. Some are less obvious. Some, like this one, make it pretty much impossible to distinguish their gender since they always keep me at an angle that makes identification impossible. Despite not knowing which way it swings, I do know it sees me as a major threat. It reacts to my presence the same way all squirrels react to a cat or other predator. It’s amusing; the little bastard runs to the tree and begins barking at me as a warning that it sees me, isn’t fooled into a false sense of security, and is willing to warn its brethren. I, of course, am to be petrified by this display. All the barking and other squirrel noises, all the tail waving, and all the running up and down the tree to make certain I realize his advantage, and you can no doubt tell how absolutely terrified I must be. And sometimes he does this because he sees me through the window.
As I said, “I’m SOOOOO scared.”
Do let me in advance apologize for the quality of the sound. I did not realize until after I recorded this that I was holding the camera with one of my fingers over the microphone. Oh well. Just turn it up a bit to hear the little rebel as he tells me how it is.
[eastern fox squirrel (Sciurus niger); I repeat myself: the WMV sucks in both video and audio quality; oh well]
You’re just jealous of my fluffy tail
Mockingbirds are violent. They chase and attack whatever threats violate their territory (such as red-tailed hawks, other mockingbirds, and cats [and, collaterally, people, although I can’t guarantee they don’t attack humans directly under the right circumstances]).
I stood outside today watching a squirrel get smacked around by a mockingbird. I realize the birds have a nest in the tree out here, and I realize squirrels pose a risk to the nest from simple carelessness. Still, the birds attack the squirrels regardless of where they are and whether or not they’re even close to a nest. I guess they have the same mean streak blue jays have.
This is the same species of mockingbird seen in this post: Mimus polyglottos, or the northern mockingbird. (As a side note for those who don’t read Latin, that scientific name is equivalent to “many-tongued mimic”, an appropriate name for a bird that can learn the songs of more than three dozen other species for inclusion in their own calls.) These avian warriors are the state bird of Texas (calling into question the “northern” thing). You’ll see the bird attack the squirrel twice, and twice you’ll see the squirrel weather the storm with aplomb followed immediately by returning to lunch. He has his priorities right, eh?
To make it interesting, the graphic I used below is a slow-motion version of one of the hits. I was enthralled with it because the squirrel starts to react before the bird even arrives (watch his tail). This happens the second time he’s hit as well. Notice it’s only the bird making noise when he hits the squirrel.
And right after the bird hits him? Well, the “tree rat” goes back to munching on the seeds and nuts I’d tossed out there for his kind and the birds.
I tried to get a shot of the bird near the end of the video. You see a quick glimpse of him sitting on the fence quite near to me. As soon as the camera is on him, he flies away (chicken!).
The video is 2:16 (two minutes sixteen seconds). The image links to the WMV version and is 22.8 MB. You can also see the AVI version (33.4 MB) here. You can see the MOV version (28.2 MB) here. Finally, you can see the MPEG4 version (6.3 MB) here (trust me, it’s not worth it).
And yes, the bird continued to torment the squirrel for quite some time, and as the video infers, he was hitting him every two minutes or so. Cranky bastard.
For those with a few minutes and the interest to do so, I’d appreciate some feedback on the WMV, MOV and AVI versions. I’m trying to figure out which format I should go with for videos here. I prefer MOV because I have more control over the video rendering, but I know WMV has a much larger audience (still, I prefer not to support MS with that silliness). AVI and MPEG4 are industry standards and are generally supported on all platforms. The former is the raw camera data and generally is a very large file (no compression), and the latter uses great but significantly lossy compression (so the quality plummets). Anyway, are there preferences? Does anyone see a difference that would warrant one format over another? Any other comments?
And when all the breakdancing was done
[eastern fox squirrel (Sciurus niger); re:]