
But I was puzzled -- the tails seemed shorter than those of our usual gray squirrels. John's opinion is that these are young squirrels. Whatever they are, they have a nice cozy spot for the winter.

Speaking of squirrels, the other day when Josie was here, she gnawed her way through most of a big apple. When she abandoned the still sizable core, I tossed it out under the bird feeder where a gray squirrel was foraging for dropped seed. It landed a ways away from him and rolled off down hill
He didn't seem to notice at first, then his head went up and he began weaving around, sniffing the grass and following the path the apple had taken, just like a hunting dog. He finally found where it had rolled to a stop against a fallen limb and got it in his mouth somehow -- the thing was three time the size of his head -- and off he went.

And then there are the deer. The same deer that destroyed much our our garden. Six of them on the hillside by our house. (All these pictures are through the double-paned class of our bedroom windows.)

Relaxing in the sun. They're not too worried. When I let the dogs out, Layla and Bob tear off after the deer who yawn, stand up and leap the fence, and disappear into the woods. At least the dogs get some exercise.

Maybe what I need to do is to accept the situation. Next summer I could become a supporter of some of the many tailgate markets in our area. And then I could set up a tripod and devote time that would otherwise have been spent in the garden to getting better pictures of our neighbors.
(This last picture is terrible But it's the first time I've caught sight of a mature buck on our property.)

