A well-meaning resident who lives on the Cedar Falls Road
recently “saved” an injured raccoon. She
took the animal to “Crazy Bob,” who amputated the infected leg and will
eventually replace the recovered, three-legged raccoon back into the wild.
This person made an assumption about the cause of injury that I
believe to be incorrect, misleading and results in attempting to discredit licensed
trappers and deceive an uneducated public.
We have an injured raccoon. How many ways could this occur?
1. Mother Raccoon tells her young that it is time to go out on
their own and survive. This happens through family territorial battles and/or a
dwindling food-supply squabble.
2. Predation by other wild animals. Coyote, cougar and bobcats
live in this area and are opportunistic predators.
3. Domestic pets fighting to protect territory and their own
food dish on the porch, or large animals kicking/stepping on a nuisance
intruder.
4. Hit by some moving road vehicle. This time of year there are
an increasing amount of “roads kills.” Food is less abundant, family unit
ties are weakening and animals are putting themselves at risk to eat and stay alive.
5. A home or landowner took appropriate or inappropriate action
to protect domestic pets, livestock, fish ponds or garden. There is no way
to tell if the person was skilled or unskilled in their attempt.
6. Natural cause of infection or injury from the type of life the
wild animal is subject to.
7. A foot-hold trap. Unfortunately, the well-meaning resident
obviously has no understanding of this trap and goes to great lengths to
embellish upon its dangers to her family and the public in general. The
facts are: No licensed trapper would be authorized by law to set a trap in the
area at this time of year, but more importantly, no licensed trapper would
have a reason to set a trap at this time of year. However, a licensed
nuisance-control trapper would have the authority if there was a need. These
nuisance-control trappers would not be excluded from trapping with a
foot-hold trap by Initiative 713.
So now we have a handicapped raccoon, which I believe was a
very young animal who has never been through a winter. This
three-legged amputee is going to be placed in a
very high-risk, stressful situation. It will encounter extreme hardships to
establish territory, find shelter, obtain food and water, as well as be elusive
enough to be undetected or strong enough to protect itself. Will this animal
survive? What set of circumstances and human intervention has created a cruel
situation for this animal?
Fred Lawrence,
North Bend