May 21, 2005, 13:29
When you live in the middle of a 2 million person urban center like Vancouver, it is easy to forget that we are on the edge of a wilderness, and that our separation from nature is largely an illusion.
About a week and a half ago I became aware that we were sharing our house with wildlife of some kind. In the past I have had mice, squirrels and pigeons, but this time the sounds were distinctly larger and much more nocturnal. Persistent scratching of claws against the wood of the roof, shambling movement across the ceiling, and lately, most ominously, the high-pitched mewling of new borns. Nocturnal, large and roof nests = Raccoons!
For those of you not familiar with raccoons, they are an agressive, highly territorial animal with extremely sharp claws about the size of a small dog. They are cute as anything, so we tend to portray them as friendly and benign, but they are highly distructive to property. Having a family of them in the house keeping us awake all night with scratching, chewing wiring, and clawing their way through drywall wasn't an acceptable alternative.
I called an expert.
First step: locate the entrances - there were 2. Next remove a roof vent and cut a larger hole in the roof. The mother raccoon leapt out of the hole at that point and aggressively tried to chase us off the roof. Swinging a board like a bat made her retreat to a tree about 20 feet away.
The expert sealed up the entrances with heavy gauge wire mesh bolted to the walls. Then the expert lowered himself through the hole in the roof, located the nest and pulled out 2 babies. Meanwhile, it was necessary to keep fending off the mother raccoon from going into the hole to attack the guy in there from behind in a confined space.
Seal up the roof and replace shingles. The babies are in a humane box on the roof so that the mother can come to collect them and take them away.
Here is a photo of the mother preparing to attack. The object is the lower right is a roof vent such as the one the expert removed.
![[Image: Raccoon.jpg]](http://www.shuttertalk.com/forums/images/upload/Raccoon.jpg)
...and her are the new-borns - they are still blind and deaf - less than a week old.
![[Image: Baby%20Raccoons.jpg]](http://www.shuttertalk.com/forums/images/upload/Baby%20Raccoons.jpg)
Let's hope we got them all out!!
About a week and a half ago I became aware that we were sharing our house with wildlife of some kind. In the past I have had mice, squirrels and pigeons, but this time the sounds were distinctly larger and much more nocturnal. Persistent scratching of claws against the wood of the roof, shambling movement across the ceiling, and lately, most ominously, the high-pitched mewling of new borns. Nocturnal, large and roof nests = Raccoons!
For those of you not familiar with raccoons, they are an agressive, highly territorial animal with extremely sharp claws about the size of a small dog. They are cute as anything, so we tend to portray them as friendly and benign, but they are highly distructive to property. Having a family of them in the house keeping us awake all night with scratching, chewing wiring, and clawing their way through drywall wasn't an acceptable alternative.
I called an expert.
First step: locate the entrances - there were 2. Next remove a roof vent and cut a larger hole in the roof. The mother raccoon leapt out of the hole at that point and aggressively tried to chase us off the roof. Swinging a board like a bat made her retreat to a tree about 20 feet away.
The expert sealed up the entrances with heavy gauge wire mesh bolted to the walls. Then the expert lowered himself through the hole in the roof, located the nest and pulled out 2 babies. Meanwhile, it was necessary to keep fending off the mother raccoon from going into the hole to attack the guy in there from behind in a confined space.
Seal up the roof and replace shingles. The babies are in a humane box on the roof so that the mother can come to collect them and take them away.
Here is a photo of the mother preparing to attack. The object is the lower right is a roof vent such as the one the expert removed.
![[Image: Raccoon.jpg]](http://www.shuttertalk.com/forums/images/upload/Raccoon.jpg)
...and her are the new-borns - they are still blind and deaf - less than a week old.
![[Image: Baby%20Raccoons.jpg]](http://www.shuttertalk.com/forums/images/upload/Baby%20Raccoons.jpg)
Let's hope we got them all out!!