My Cat's Late Night Visitors
Sunday, 07.01.2007, 03:41pm (GMT)
My cat Spike is very laid back .He's a lover, not a fighter, so it was
with surprise that one morning as I was feeding him his daily ration of
cat food, I saw two scratches on his nose. He ate the food like he was
famished, instead of taking a few bites then going somewhere to think
the situation over. Normally he would then come back to his bowl and
begin to eat again. At the time I didn't know there were raccoons
eating his food at night.
Spike sleeps in the garage. He has a cat door to the outside, so he
comes and goes as he pleases. Only on the coldest winter nights does he
sleep in the house, preferring the solitude of his own kingdom where
there is always silence after dark. His quiet time was shattered one
night a couple of hours after dinner. I heard a noise in the garage. I
opened the door to the garage and saw a large raccoon scurrying from
the cat's bowl to the opening in the pet door. He scooted through the
door to the outside, then turned around and stuck his head back through
the door, staring at me as if I should be sorry for interrupting his
dinner.
The next day I did some studying about the subject of raccoon removal.
I found out that they are nocturnal animals, sleeping all day and
feeding and roaming at night. I also learned that there are ways to
remove raccoons without shooting them. They are as follows:
Remove their food supply! This sounded like such a good idea that I
tried it. I brought the cat's dish into the house. That didn't deter
the raccoon in the least. He chewed the lids off the five gallon
containers that held the cat food, scattering it all over the garage.
This dampened my spirits somewhat, but I was determined to drive him
from our house forever!
Play the radio loudly in the areas the raccoon has invaded! They will
think someone is talking and stay away! I tuned the radio in the garage
to a station that played rap music all night and turned up the volume.
If that didn't do the trick nothing would. It didn't work! Somehow he
climbed up a bookshelf onto the top of a refrigerator where I had
stored the cat food. He pushed it off onto the floor, dry cat food
bouncing on the concrete floor like raindrops on a roof.
Trap the animals. I called the city animal control people and they
brought me a trap. This was a big cage that would catch the raccoon
without hurting it. The theory is that the raccoons would enter the
trap, stepping on the trip mechanism as they ate the bait, (cat food),
thus tripping the trap door. The raccoons would be caught, the city
would then remove the animal to a safe place, miles away from my house
and all would be peaceful again. Wrong! The only thing I caught was my
cat Spike! Twice!
I learned that those traps do work, but raccoons are very intelligent.
You have to put concrete blocks or some kind of barrier around the
sides of the trap so they won't put their paws into the cage and grab
the food without springing the trap. Raccoons have paws with fingers
that enable them to grasp food and stuff it into their mouths.
By this time I realized I had a family of raccoons. By now I had seen
five; two adults and three young ones. The young ones let me take their
pictures while munching on Spike's cat food. I reward them for allowing
me a photo shoot. The older ones wait patiently outside the door until
I finish shooting. They'll finish up the food when I go back into the
house. Spike the cat is sprawled in an old chair, yawning at the
raccoons.
My wife thinks I'm nuts to have fallen under the spell of the
adolescent raccoons. In fact, since one of the young raccoons tries to
get into the house when we open the door at night, she's gotten a
little hostile. Maybe I am nuts, but they are a lot of fun.
I've ordered a sure-fire raccoon repellant that I know will work. It's
coyote urine. Sprinkled around the area the raccoons frequent, it is
supposed to scare them away. They're afraid of coyotes because they're
one of the natural predators of raccoons. If this doesn't work, I'll
order wolf urine.
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