Posts Tagged ‘bobcat’

Just A Short Walk in Maine

It was supposed to be just an ordinary everyday walk with the dog after work in a place where we’ve walked many times, but today ended up with two firsts.  The first and biggest mystery happened shortly after we got into the woods.  In this particular place I walk up an old grown in woods road, take a left into a growing up woods cut and loop around back to the old woods road in a big circle.  It’s an interesting area with lots of wildlife sign.  Except today, when I turned to go into the cut the dog did a weird jump.  I called him back and he jumped weird on the way back too.  It appeared that he didn’t want to touch a particular place on the ground.  So, I tried to make him walk over the spot and he would have nothing of it, running in the opposite direction to the end of his leash and sitting. I coaxed him over asking him what it was and pointing to the ground.  He slowly came over and did a big stretch to take a little sniff at the ground and again off in the other direction.    So, I got down on all fours and had a sniff for myself – kind of something musky but I couldn’t get much else. Nose just isn’t good enough I guess.   I think its the first time that I’ve seen a dog scared of a smell before.  He was acting like a horse does when  it smells a predator, all antsy and nervous.  Here is the spot he wouldn’t cross;

So now I was a little nervous.  I’ve seen bear sign up there but nothing recently and I’ve seen no evidence of bear baiters.  The area does look very “catty” though – between the cuts are dense fir/spruce thickets that look like great travel ways for bobcat.  Looking at the foreground of the picture you can see that the ground is scratched up a bit, here it is closer;

It kind of looks to me like a bobcat scrape.  From the Bobcat trappers guide “Scrapes made with the hind feet in soil or ground litter serve as intentionally constructed visual markers and are normally made at important activity areas in the home range.  These hind feet scrapes usually take the form of two parallel groves which  together form a mark that is somewhat rectangular in shape.  Scrapes are normally about 4-6 inches in width and 10-12 inches in length.”   I’ll never know for sure what he smelled out there, but my best guess is it was a bobcat, and he didn’t like it.

So with that puzzling around my brain we headed up the trail a ways, and I was looking down thinking about what he smelled when an owl took off from a branch directly above my head and flew down the trail and into a big pine.  I once came across a saw whet owl crossing a fir thicket to look up and see him staring at me with those big eyes, bobbing and weaving trying to figure out what I was, but this one was big, and completely silent flight.  It was amazing.  I only got a look at the rear end and wings and he had lots of barring.  Scared the bejesus out of me.  I tried to spy him in the pine but it was too thick to see.

Further up the trail the dog stopped and looked into the woods – I figured he was after another squirrel until a brace of partridges exploded from the underbrush.  A bit rattled now we carried on and when we looped back I was looking for the owl in the pine and he was right back where he was the first time and we jumped him again.  If only I’d seen him first to get a picture.  He was overlooking two small trails – waiting to ambush something I guess.  So, a simple after work dog walk turned into a pretty cool adventure.  Just a short walk in Maine.

Maine Beaver Tails

 

It was a wind chill advisory day in Maine and I was a mile from the truck standing in front of a beaver house with my friend Peter.  Wind chill advisories are issued when the temperature with the wind chill is expected to fall between approximately -15 to -24 degrees farenheight.  I’m not sure if the wind chill had frosted my brain a little that day, for I knew better than to be standing in front of an active beaver house.   Beaver movement in and out of the entrance, creates weak ice or even worse, shell ice which does not have much strength, and as luck would have it I was standing directly over the channel of the entrance.  The ice gave way with really little warning at all, and I looked down to see the black of the water coming at me.  I reached out and caught myself with my hands leaving me very briefly waist deep in the frigid water, before I leaned back and rolled out of the hole, and rolled on the ice to Peter.  We rubbed snow, which absorbs moisture, all over my legs and I stood up and brushed it off.  It was so cold that the outer layer I was wearing quickly froze solid.  So quickly in fact that the other three layers I was wearing never even got wet from the whole experience.  I was able to finish out the day, and it wasn’t until I got into the truck with the heater on, that my pants began to melt and I got wet and cold for the ride home.

Beavers flourish in Maine for a a number of reasons, foremost being because there is a lot of habitat for them here – in fact there are 37,000 linear miles of beaver habitat here in the state which has the capacity to support 45,000 to 68,000 beavers, of which annually about 10,000 are harvested.  A few years ago due to an increased number of landowner complaints, the state made the season more liberal in hopes that more beavers would be harvested.   A fair amount of Maine is covered by dirt roads, and they are easily washed out by beaver activity on the myriad of streams and rivers that criss cross the state.   Maine at least gets it – I find it hard to fathom other states that have reduced or severely restricted methods of trapping, or trapping altogether.   For example, in the years since Massachusetts banned almost all trapping in ’05, their budget for beaver problems has grown to $1,208,000 which is paid for by taxpayer dollars.  Why on earth would you do that when there are people that will do it for free?  I did some damage control trapping for a while and I always asked if the client could wait until the fur was marketable (about late October thru April) for me to do the job, and I would do it for free.  When they would profusely thank me for fixing their problem I would tell them to remember it if there was ever a vote here to ban trapping.  There is an in depth  Beaver Assessment of Maine paper which you can see here. There is a really interesting chart in the paper showing the average price per pelt, number harvested, and number of license holders.   Trapping and the beaver used to be so tied to our society and way of life it is amazing to me.   Beaver pelts or plews, were as good as currency, Manhatten Island is what it is today because it used to be the place where furs were traded, bought, and sold, and the canoe races here in Maine I believe had there start with the fur trade – the faster you could get your fur to market, the more you got paid.  Beaver trapping here in the state is quite regulated and the Commissioner can and does close areas to the taking of beaver.  Each pelt has to be tagged by a Game Warden, who sends the information of where and when it was caught to the State, so that populations can be monitored.

Over the years I’ve noticed that bobcats love to stand on beaver houses, and I’ve often imagined what a beaver must feel like hearing the cat walk on the house, and hearing it sniff at the top.  Beaver do have a distinctive smell from their castor which was used for earaches, deafness, headaches, and loss of memory back in the day and the beavers use it for territorial purposes using castor mounds, which are large globs of mud deposited on the stream bank with castor deposited on it.  Apparently it all smells uniquely different for them , as it’s an effective method to use castor from another colony to illicit a territorial response in the beaver.   It’s often possible to smell a well established colony on a stream long before you get there.  One year walking down the fragile ice of a stream, Peter and I came across blood on the ice, followed by a blood smear on the snow into some evergreens.  After poking around some, we found where a patient cat had laid in wait overlooking a patch of open water, melting the snow some where it waited.  It appeared that a beaver had came up into the open water and the cat had killed him, dragging him across the ice and into some privacy to enjoy his meal.  ‘Cats seem to love beaver meat, and we had one following us one year – investigating all of the sets, and getting a free meal when we had a catch. One time after it had snowed just enough to show a print, I realized when I got back to the truck that I had forgotten something on the beaver flowage, we had been gone maybe 15 minutes, and when we got back to the ice the cat had been there, and visited all the places we did.  It was a bit eerie to know that he had likely been in a position to be watching us while we were there.

During one winter there was a railroad line I had to walk several miles on, and along the way a red squirrel had dug a hole under the tracks and I would stop and talk to him, which of course he wasn’t very happy with and would scold me from inside his hole.  Then one day it had snowed just a dusting, and as I walked by the squirrel hole, he was no longer scolding me, and there were no tracks on the snow like there always were previous.  I then noticed the track on the rail itself. It was a bobcat track, and it extended as far as I could see – just on the rail – ending at the squirrel hole.  He must have stood waiting for the squirrel to come out and grabbed a quick meal. I followed his track on the rail for just over a mile, where they came from, and went back to, a dense thicket of fur and spruce.  On the way back through later that day, all the evidence had disappeared – the sun had melted the snow off the tracks.

We had discovered a small flowage near an abandoned bridge which had an  old culvert running underneath of it.   The  beavers had plugged both ends of the culvert and created a pond for themselves behind it, with a decent size house, and we decided to come back the following weekend.  It rained for the next few days, and then turned off cold again, and upon returning to the house, the ice had collapsed.  The large amount of rain had pushed through the stuff in the culvert, and the beavers would be unable to fix it from under the ice, the water drained from the pond, and the ice collapsed, leaving the beavers without water or access to their food supply.  I returned that spring to look things over, and it didn’t appear they made it through the winter.

It is common practice not catch all the beavers out of a particular house to leave some for the following year, and trappers generally leave subtle clues for others that the particular flowage has been trapped.  Maine law says that you have to be a certain distance from the house, and generally the further away you are is the best way to just take the older and bigger ones.  I missed my opportunity to take a great picture one year, I was checking sets one cold night, about 10 degrees or so and the air was very still.  Coming over the rise to look onto the flowage the moon was hanging in the air behind the house and the conditions were just right to see the steam from the house rising across the moon  into the cold night air, and I didn’t have the camera.  Maybe someday I’ll be able to paint a picture of what it was like, which was beautiful, as are all the sights and memories of the times I spent in the woods of Maine on the trapline.

 

The Maine Cougar Conundrum

A few years ago, while walking out of a woods road near dusk I looked up to the crest of the hill on the road and saw something glide out of the woods, stop and turn to look at me.   I was very surprised at it’s size, and uttered a small oath under my breath as I struggled to identify what it was that I was looking at.   As I got closer and got a better look I realized it was a huge bobcat.   A few days after that I saw the local game warden and mentioned to him that if he had any cougar sightings  from that town it was just a big  bobcat.

The Eastern Cougar was declared officially extinct in Maine on March 2 of 2011, to the chagrin of lots of people in this state that believe that it exists here.   I was lucky enough to see and hear a cougar  while on a two week hiking trip in New Mexico with the Boy Scouts.  I believe that Maine has the habitat that can support cougars, I have a very open mind about the possibility of their presence here, and I would love to be the person that gets irrefutable proof that they are here, but I don’t think they are, and here is why.

First is most people, including those that spend a fair amount of time in the woods of this state ever see a wild cat, and if they are lucky enough to it is only for a very brief moment.  Seeing a glimpse of a creature like that often leads one to believe that it is bigger than it truly is.   And bobcats in Maine get a lot bigger than people imagine they do.  Pictures are worth a thousand words so take a look at the picture below;

Maine Bobcat

What is it?  Being honest with yourself, what would you say if you got a glimpse of this running away from you in the woods?  What would you estimate that it weighs?   Look at the tail – is it the distinctive bobcat tail, or is it a long tail curled between the rear legs?

Walking through the woods this creature would look huge – believe me.  To answer the questions above, it is a bobcat – a 50 pound one.   A lot of people think bobcats are covered with spots – here in Maine, and especially if the cat is older, such is not the case, as you can see from the picture.

Now, compare that picture to this picture;

Can you tell the difference?  If you saw either one of those for the second that you do see them in the woods, would you be able to identify it?

Second – all the purported mountain lion  pictures I’ve seen are magically missing the distinctive long tail.  In one of the general stores in the Katahdin region someone even went to the trouble of scratching out the tail on the photo.  There is one photo I have seen that has given  me pause, and that can be found here looking at the game camera photo(s).

Looking at the enlarged photo, it does appear to have a long tail, but you can’t actually see it. I’ve also seen ears that appear as in the photo on bobcats.   The first give away that it is a bobcat is it has belly spots.  The second is when you look at the original photo and compare it to the surrounding scenery, it just isn’t anywhere near big enough or tall enough to be a cougar.

Finally,  when the lynx population started dropping down into Northern Maine a few years ago we knew it because we had bodies.  A car ran one over, and a trapper caught one.  If you recall the lone wolf that wandered into the state 10 years ago or so was promptly shot.  I believe if we had  mountain lions in the state at some point we would see a dead one – either by car, rifle, or trap, and despite all the “sightings” we haven’t seen that.  Also,  it is still legal here in Maine to use hounds for bobcats during the winter, and I do believe that at some point if the big cats were here, someone would have had one treed by now.

That’s my two cents on the Maine Cougar issue…

If you have genuine untouched photos I’d love to see them.

There is an interesting update here

A very impressive dispersal to say the least!

And a good video;


Some truly fantastic bobcat footage;

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