Ah … poor little fella , I know some people consider them vermin but I like them.
This little chap looks real frightened but is well and truly stuck.
It makes you wonder how you managed to get himself so well and truly done up like a wannabee (but sadly failed) Houdini.
That will teach him to be a bit more careful next time!
We have a squirrel that comes around every morning and makes a dash for the bird feeder containing peanuts. It hangs from a wire and somehow the crafty little devil (meant nicely!) manages to lift the feeder off the hook and help himself to the spilt nuts all over the ground.
I have managed to stop that by hooking the feeder between two branches, one of which hooks over the band at the top of the feeder… The squirrels are clever but their physiology lets them down. That along with a lack of team work. the little blighters are not team players otherwise the whole world would be in trouble.
Don’t forget all you over’s…like they do forget where they had buried them,
Some of the acorns they bury…,
They grow into Grand Oak Trees…So they are thinking very green for mankind, do you see that now.
There’s loads of them down our local park in the mornings. They are so used to people and their dogs walking through the park, they don’t even bother to run off.
I don’t mind them out in places like that, but it’s a different kettle of fish when the little wretches come and dig out my pots and tubs early in the mornings to hide their treasures!
I got fed up with sweeping all the compost up and putting it back in the tubs, so have had to put chicken wire over the top of everything now. Grrrr . .
I have a strategy for that Mups. I put broken bits of plant pots on the earth around bedding plants that are in pots. If there are bulbs then I have some foil plates with holes in that go over bulbs planted in pots. These are weighed down by broken bits of old ceramic pots. It has worked very well so far. Like I said they are let down by their physiology and lack of team working skills. Squirrels seem very competitive with each other and they have only little paws which are great for climbing but rubbish for lifting anything too heavy. It’s also a handy way to recycle cracked pots.
I must admit to feeding a nursing squirrel mum in the Spring of this year. She used to come up on the flat roof by where I work and I used to throw peanuts out there for the birds. She would eat the nuts and then jump up to the window to tell me she was still hungry. It was a mutually rewarding relationship for a few weeks as it always brought a smile to my face. I sometimes wonder how many of the squirrels in the garden are from her offspring.