Monday, November 3, 2008

Even in Virginia

I have my eyes peeled for squirrels. It used to only be ducks and geese, and now squirrels too.  

I fed squirrels by hand in the park for 2 years, but got more attached to the ducks and geese because I could tell them apart and had repetitive relationships with them.  I've probably fed the same squirrels here and there but it's nearly impossible to tell them apart, or get to know where they actually live (where they sleep and call home within the forest), the latter being obvious with the waterfowl.

But after Hurricane Ike, I got to know so much about them and bonded with so many during various stages of their growth that I am now hooked.  So now I always have a few nuts in my pocket or purse. My dear Husband is the soul of patience if I stop to hand them out.  I actually think he likes seeing them come up too and sometimes he feeds them too.  

If they're not so used to people, it varies in difficulty to get their attention, or once gotten, to get them to come close.  Just like people, some are more aware than others of what's going on around them. Some are shy, some are skittish, some are bold, and a few are fearless.  If you have to toss them a nut, after they've eaten it and see you're offering more, they are more likely to come closer, and eventually take it from your fingers. But the ones for whom this is not a regular practice can be so jumpy, I've learned it's best to still toss it the inch or two to them to avoid getting accidentally scratched or nipped in the process.  

This is a little guy I made friends with on the campus of the University of Virginia, the college conceived, built and governed by Thomas Jefferson (You can see the red brick and white painted trim behind the squirrel).  I figured squirrels there were used to people, as students criss cross under the many trees on their stately lawns.  In Virginia I saw no Fox Squirrels (calmer by nature), only Greys.  It always takes me somewhere when I am one on one with an animal. It's like the whole rest of the world evaporates and I am immersed completely in the NOW.  It's my way of meditating.