Raccoon Whisperer...My Cat Spike!
Sunday, 07.01.2007, 03:38pm (GMT)
The raccoons were gone! Life as I knew it could begin to get back to
normal with my cat Spike being the only animal in the house. For months
we had been plagued with a family of raccoons who would come into the
garage from the outside through Spike's pet door. His cat food was
always in jeopardy. Since raccoons will eat practically anything,
everything that produced an aroma was fair game to the raccoons. To
call this bunch of free loaders pets, would not be appropriate for they
were nothing more than pests!
After moving the cat's bowl into the house, an inconvenience for Spike
who prefers to eat his dinner in private, I thought the raccoons would
get the message and leave. No such luck. Even though there would be no
food for them when they sneaked into the garage at night, they seemed
to appear more often than before, scratching at boxes or savaging
plastic containers trying to find a morsel of food. Through the door to
the garage, you could hear them growling and fighting among themselves.
They obviously loved playing in the cat litter because it would be
scattered throughout the garage each morning.
Spike didn't seem to mind the disturbance each night. He would stretch
out on his pillow on the work bench and survey the scene playing out in
front of him. He would occasional grumble or give them a raspy meow as
they tore up my garage each night.
Perhaps I may have aided in prolonging their stay at my house. When
they were younger and adorable, I would add more food to Spike's bowl
after he had eaten, in hopes they would come around at night and allow
me to photograph them. They didn't seem to mind the flash as long as I
kept the food bowl full.
Like all babies, little raccoons grow up to be big raccoons. I mean BIG
raccoons! My wife thinks the reason they became so huge is due to the
vitamin enriched cat food, complete with an assortment of minerals,
that they ate each night in my garage as they were growing up. Maybe
that could have had something to do with them hanging around so much.
Luckily, as they grew older they all left Spike's garage and let him
live alone and in peace. Except one!
There was one, whom I named Bandit, I know that's not original but hey,
I'm no John Grisham, that continued to visit each night and eat any cat
food that Spike had left. He also became irritable if he couldn't find
food. He would attempt to chew the lids off food buckets, and if we
were cooking anything in the kitchen, he would scratch on the entry
door to the house wanting to see what was making that tantalizing
smell. I was beginning to wish I had never taken his picture.
When he began scaring my wife with his attempts to enter the house
seeking food, I knew I had to get serious about this raccoon. Spike was
beginning to get nervous also. When he was lying in his bed inside the
house, I could see his ears perk up when he heard sounds in the garage
that was beyond my range of hearing. He would make a weird grumbling
sound so softly you could barely hear it. I started calling him the
raccoon whisperer.
The situation became intolerable one morning when Spike wouldn't get
out of his bed in the garage. I attributed his lack of enthusiasm for
the day to a hard night of catting around the night before. I didn't
realize he was injured until he arose and tried to walk. He was limping
significantly, bleeding from a badly scraped or gnawed left rear paw.
Spike must have gotten in the way of the raccoon trying to find something to eat!
We took him to the veterinarian and he confirmed that Spike had been
injured by another animal. I immediately began to think of all the
horrible diseases my cat may have contracted by being chewed on by the
raccoon! I wasn't much worried about rabies since Spike had just had
his annual shot. Canine distemper is a common virus that kills both
dogs and cats, which is spread by raccoons that are infected with the
disease. That one I could worry about!
Early in my attempts to rid myself of the raccoon family, I had gotten
a trap from the city animal control folks. After two weeks all I had
caught was Spike! I decided to try them again while he was laid up
recuperating.
This time it worked! The very first evening the raccoon entered the
trap to get at the can of cat food I had wired to the bottom of the
trap. It had taken a little over four months from the time I had
started my raccoon eradication project, to when the last of them was
gone.
Spike has now regained mobility with only a slight limp, but he still
perks his ears up at the slightest sound coming from the garage.
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