As the sun dipped low in the western sky, I folded the big plastic tarp for the last time. With pleasure, I hung my trusty leaf rake on its pegboard hook in the garage. I won't need it for another 12 months and quite honestly, I won't miss it one bit.
This little ritual symbolized the end of leaf raking for another year.
This season, in addition to leaves, we had an abundance of pine cones and acorns. Old timers have told me that indicates a long, cold and snowy winter is coming. They say that this is nature's way of providing for the critters so they will have plenty to eat for the months ahead. I've noticed a flurry of chipmunk and squirrel activity so perhaps they are stocking up.
In past years, I have made a game out of my chipmunk trapping activities. I designed a critter scoreboard that I nailed up on a wall in the garage. Each critter caught added another mark to the scoreboard. Before anybody gets too excited, I live-trap them. Once caught in my Havahart trap, and their fate recorded on the scoreboard, I drive them to an undisclosed location in the national forest and released them. Once freed in their new neighborhood, I'm sure that they joined their previously caught relatives and no doubt a family reunion was organized.
This year, due to budgetary concerns, economic uncertainties and because I am not running for any elected position, I made a decision to scrap the relocation program. I felt that it was very unlikely that any federal funding for chipmunk deportation would be forthcoming. With gasoline prices having doubled and the price of sunflower seeds going off the charts, I decided to let nature take its course. "Live and let live" was my new motto. I vowed to co-exist in harmony with Chip & Dale and their ever-expanding family.
Anybody living in chipmunk country knows that the little rascals cannot resist an open garage door. To them, it's like going to Walmart with a gift card. One just never knows what might be on sale!
Not wanting anyone to get locked inside the store after hours, I began setting the live-trap inside the garage, baited with those pricey sunflower seeds. Usually I don't leave the garage door up longer than necessary, simply to discourage uninvited guests from gaining access to my man-cave. However on nice autumn days, it is always a delight to work in the garage with the door up. Besides, the trap is set.
The telltale "clank" of the trap doors falling shut always gets my attention. Upon further inspection, I am certain to find either Chip or Dale looking back at me from within the trap. After catching one or the other, I take it outside and release my visitor near the woodpile. I then reset the trap in its usual garage location.
Earlier this fall, I was working on a project and the garage door was wide open. I had caught a chipmunk, released it and decided to take a break from my work to enjoy a cold beer in the warm autumn sun. Sitting in a lawn chair, just outside the garage door opening, I spied a chipmunk scurrying in my direction from the woodpile. He stopped at my feet, looked at me, and then ran under my chair and into the garage. "Clank," the trap sprung.
Picking up the trap, I was greeted by a familiar face connected to a unique scraggy tail. It was the same chipmunk! By the time the day was over, I had caught the same critter four times. Since then, we have become good friends. I open the door and he comes in for a free meal. I have learned where its den is located and occasionally leave a pinch of sunflower seeds on his doorstep.
This late in the season, I don't see him as much. I hope he has stored up plenty of my sunflower seeds to carry him through our Michigan winter. Who knows, maybe we will have our own reunion in the spring.
Ed Hungness and his wife became full-time residents of Fife Lake in 2005 after Ed's retirement. He can be reached at edhungness@yahoo.com or by mail at P.O. Box 57, Fife Lake, MI 49633
Columns
Ed Hungness: So long for a while
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- News From ... 100 Years Ago: 04/01/2013
- Northern Notes: 02/18/2013
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Fee, tax increases vital to fix state roads
Do Michigan's lawmakers have the will to vote for some painful spending that is absolutely necessary if the state has any prayer of being economically competitive in years to come?
Continued ... -
Northern dynamics in Dem chief race
Of the 32 men and women who have chaired Michigan's two major parties since World War II, not one has been from northern Michigan. No Republican chair has been from north of the Grand Rapids area; no Democrat from north of the Flint area.
Continued ... -
Phil Power: Distinction between teaching, giving
Gov. Rick Snyder unveiled his proposed state budget for the next two years Feb. 7. If there is a core idea in his $50.9 billion budget message, it's the distinction between investments (teaching people how to fish) and expenditures (giving people a fish.)
Continued ... - Monday, February 11, 2013
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James Cook: Complaint over mascots misguided
Forest Area Schools does it right. The Michigan Department of Civil Rights doesn't.
Continued ... - Sunday, February 10, 2013
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Loraine Anderson: Wallpaper as 'a manner of travel’
The last time I wallpapered was about 30 years ago. I vowed never to do it again.
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Ed Hungness: Valentine's Day celebrations haven't changed much
Thursday is Valentine's Day! Only four more days to buy cards, chocolates and flowers for your special Valentine! It's a fun day; an opportunity to show your love for others. The greeting card companies, florists and confectioners also eagerly look forward to this annual observance and its bottom-line contributions.
Continued ... -
Lessenberry: Detroit continues its self-destructive path
To anyone not steeped in the long, dreary and self-destructive history of racial identity politics in Detroit, it is hard to see their city council's move last week to reject the state's offer to fix up Belle Isle and run it as a state park as other than sheer insanity.
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Weeks: Some applaud Gov. Snyder, but not Brewer
Those who cherish Outdoor Michigan — including the impact of the Great Lakes on the state's economy and recreation — found much to applaud in Gov. Rick Snyder's budget message last week.
Continued ... - Saturday, February 9, 2013
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Adapted in TC: Author, retiree inspiring
One of my childhood friends had her leg amputated last year due to infection. She's new to the area and I've gotten reacquainted with her. She's shared some of the trials of living with limb loss.
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Perspectives: Never too old to play
It doesn't matter if you're a child or a child-like adult, though, because you can play the bear or the hunter with abandon. A few nights ago, we invited our longtime friends and their grandsons (and parents) to come for hot dogs and corn on the cob.
Continued ... - Thursday, February 7, 2013
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Amish Cook: Winter travel can be scary
I think a lot more about accidents since the tragedy that took the life of two of my cousins two weeks ago. Joe will take off work to go with us, which I am glad for. Days like that can be more stressful than being at home working.
Continued ... - Monday, February 4, 2013
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Northern Notes: TC resident thanks kind stranger for lunch
Eunice Groesser, of Traverse City, was having lunch at the State Street Grille on Jan. 17, when a nice young lady named Angie came over and offered to buy her lunch. Eunice told Angie it wasn’t necessary, but if she really wanted to she could.
Continued ... - Sunday, February 3, 2013
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Lessenberry: The future of the fairgrounds
Back in 1849, when Zachary Taylor was president and Michigan had been a state for barely a dozen years, the state's farmers and merchants held the first state fair in Detroit. The fair moved around for a while, till 1905, when Joseph L. Hudson, founder of the state's iconic department store chain, bought some land on Woodward Avenue, near the city's northern border.
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Garret Leiva: Snow: pretty? Or pretty annoying?
So far this winter is more bipolar than arctic polar: Frigid and flurries one day; 50 and foggy the next.
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George Weeks: Michigan's high-profile players on Capitol Hill
As Chairman Carl Levin presided last week over the contentious Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on confirmation of ex-Sen. Chuck Hagel to be the next U.S. Defense Secretary, I was struck by how much Michigan's congressional delegation is now on the front lines of major foreign and domestic issues facing the nation.
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Fleda Brown: When poetry connects with the natural world
I've seen many deer crossing the road in the evening or feeding in the fields near our cottage, but I rarely see a buck with a big rack.
Continued ... - Saturday, February 2, 2013
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Senior Focus: Family snowman-building event
The Senior Center Network and Compassionate Care Home Health Services are sponsoring a family snowman-building contest on Feb. 16 at the Traverse City Senior Center.
Continued ... - Monday, January 28, 2013
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Northern Notes: 'Yarn Fairy’ donations
Members of the Prayer Shawl Ministry at Grace Episcopal Church would like to thank the “Yarn Fairy” who dropped off bags of yarn at the church before Christmas.
Continued ... - Sunday, January 27, 2013
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Jack Lessenberry: GOP trying to alter the electoral landscape
Twelve years ago, the nation was bitterly divided over a presidential election that in the end was decided by what many called an outrageously partisan U.S. Supreme Court.
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Kathy Gibbons: The job that keeps on giving
There is nothing like having your children not only through college, but gainfully employed.
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George Weeks: Political rivals have common cause on vets
In 2010, Upper Peninsula surgeon Dan Benishek and longtime state lawmaker Jason Allen of Traverse City had a fierce battle for the Republican nomination for the 1st Congressional District seat being vacated by Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Menominee. Benishek won by just 15 votes out of nearly 99,000 cast.
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Ed Hungness: Uncle Bob Says: Save your pennies!
In late December, I made a trip to Chicago for a belated family Christmas celebration.
Continued ... - Thursday, January 24, 2013
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Dennis Chase: Manville has young Panther team rolling
When you call Reggie Manville and ask if he has a couple minutes, he responds, "I'm retired."
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