Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Animals are built for outdoor weather.
One morning last week, after very cold night, I was at Rio Shopping Center (Gaithersburg) which has a lake. Workers were picking up dead Canadian Geese and there were at least 20 of them (with pieces of ice still stuck). Some of them got stuck on the ice (body temp melts and freezes) and died overnight. It was a sad sight.
I don't meant to sound cruel, but Canada geese don't belong here. They used to live in Canada in the summer, and fly south in the winter. At some point they decided to settle in DC, to take advantage of the golf courses and manicured lawns. So they stay here all year round. Kind of like politicians who come from the rest of the country to Washington to "clean up the mess," and then, after a few years, they don't return. They discover that feeding at the public trough is not such a bad deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Animals are built for outdoor weather.
One morning last week, after very cold night, I was at Rio Shopping Center (Gaithersburg) which has a lake. Workers were picking up dead Canadian Geese and there were at least 20 of them (with pieces of ice still stuck). Some of them got stuck on the ice (body temp melts and freezes) and died overnight. It was a sad sight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The snowcrete is a problem. Squirrels can't dig thru it to get their stashed food. The cold keeps it in place.
This is not usual. I say this after 40 winters here and 16 in Massachusetts.
I feed the squirrels and birds during this event. I keep the birdbath filled with unfrozen water.
So, you are saying there won't be any squirrels this summer?
Do you often draw inferences like this? I have some investment ideas for you...
No I did not say that. I said that squirrels are having a harder time than usual. A logical inference is that fewer will make it to summer.
Anonymous wrote:If you really want to do something, The best thing you can do is feed the birds. Apparently the suet cakes are better for birds this time of year. You can also set out fresh water.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The snowcrete is a problem. Squirrels can't dig thru it to get their stashed food. The cold keeps it in place.
This is not usual. I say this after 40 winters here and 16 in Massachusetts.
I feed the squirrels and birds during this event. I keep the birdbath filled with unfrozen water.
So, you are saying there won't be any squirrels this summer?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I worry about them too. I feed a neighborhood feral cat and haven't seen her for 2 weeks, until yesterday. I was hoping she was eating- I put food out twice a day. She looked okay yesterday but I still worry.
Why not bring her in your house?
Even the basement with a light on would be better than outside, if you don't want her upstairs. Pop to Petsmart and get a litterbox.
I moved from the neighborhood a year ago but I tried often to bring her inside when I lived there. This past fall, I tried to trap her to bring her to the vet and have her live with me, but it didn't work. I also put out a heated shelter for her in a neighbor's yard when it started to get cold, but I see no evidence that she's been using it. I'll keep trying... thanks everyone.
Feral cats often have their hiding places that they are used to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same as with the deer, the red foxes can survive WAY colder weather. They have thick fur on their paws and body and their body is designed so they don't lose much heat from the paws. They're built to hunt in snow, even heavy snow, and hunt by hearing. Snow can actually be an advantage to them in hunting.
A fox can’t break the surface of this ice we have had.
Anonymous wrote:The snowcrete is a problem. Squirrels can't dig thru it to get their stashed food. The cold keeps it in place.
This is not usual. I say this after 40 winters here and 16 in Massachusetts.
I feed the squirrels and birds during this event. I keep the birdbath filled with unfrozen water.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Animals are built for outdoor weather.
One morning last week, after very cold night, I was at Rio Shopping Center (Gaithersburg) which has a lake. Workers were picking up dead Canadian Geese and there were at least 20 of them (with pieces of ice still stuck). Some of them got stuck on the ice (body temp melts and freezes) and died overnight. It was a sad sight.
I don't meant to sound cruel, but Canada geese don't belong here. They used to live in Canada in the summer, and fly south in the winter. At some point they decided to settle in DC, to take advantage of the golf courses and manicured lawns. So they stay here all year round. Kind of like politicians who come from the rest of the country to Washington to "clean up the mess," and then, after a few years, they don't return. They discover that feeding at the public trough is not such a bad deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Animals are built for outdoor weather.
One morning last week, after very cold night, I was at Rio Shopping Center (Gaithersburg) which has a lake. Workers were picking up dead Canadian Geese and there were at least 20 of them (with pieces of ice still stuck). Some of them got stuck on the ice (body temp melts and freezes) and died overnight. It was a sad sight.