This year, my blog posts seem to be about whatever is top of
mind on that given day. Today is no
exception. You see, we have lived in our
house for almost 19 years. And all day
today while I worked in our home office, five does sat in my yard – twenty-five
feet from my house.
When we first moved in, we had a beagle. Although we have just over half an acre of
wooded land, we fenced in a small perimeter around the house for the dog. The dog lived for the first ten years of us
being in the house. During that time, we
never saw any deer. Hawks, raccoons, fox, and skunks yes, but no
deer. So now we have been without the
dog for approximately nine years. And, in
the last five years, the deer have moved in.
We usually see 3-4 does walking around with the most we have ever seen
being nine. On top of that, we now also
see one buck (at least I think it is only one buck – it is hard to know since
they never travel together). He came by
today as well.
Over the years, the deer have gotten increasingly bold. This past summer, they even came to the
more-exposed front of the house. I will
admit a few years back when we had soooo much snow and the poor things were
struggling to walk chest-high in the snow on the steep hillside, I did put some
food out there for them. But only that
one time. Now, they will come as close
as ten feet from the house to munch on whatever suits them – even sitting on
the hillside and watching me cook through the kitchen window.
I don’t mind all of this and in fact, I quite like it. It is only “my” land where any humans are
concerned. Animals don’t play by human
laws and documents. Which brings me to
my next point: I don’t think they are living on my land; I think I am living on
their land. They are here all the time,
without fear, eating and resting and relieving themselves.
Nonetheless, I have trouble dealing with one aspect of our
co-habitation, their recent discoveries - my hostas and mums. I spend a great
deal of money on landscaping so I don’t appreciate everything being eaten to
within an inch of its life. And yes, I
know you can spray the plants with that awfully smelling spray but that is just
not worth the stink.
Herein lies my dilemma: how peacefully to live amongst the
woodland creatures creating a perfect balance where I respect their rights yet
still protect mine. Kind of a metaphor for life, don’t you think?
-- Eve
I figure that once they start munching on plants I paid for, all bets are off.
ReplyDeleteI hear you!
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