The DU Lounge
Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsAll pooches could take a lesson from this superior rodent hunter!
Leave it to the cats, buddy!
In_The_Wind
(72,300 posts)paleotn
(17,913 posts)A couple of Winters ago, my wife spotted a shape moving around in our back field at dusk. I got out the binoculars and it was a fox, listening, sniffing, listening and then.....pounce! Dig, dig, dig, then munch, munch, munch. He or she got one. Notorious chicken thieves, but still one of my favorites.
Nay
(12,051 posts)MuseRider
(34,109 posts)I would so prefer that than the nasty, huge rat my barn cat dropped at my feet last night. Ewwwwww. Thankfully it was dead. Poor thing.
You gotta love a dog with that much commitment. Labs are special.
catbyte
(34,386 posts)Hotler
(11,421 posts)Midnight Writer
(21,765 posts)I would be walking him in the park on a leash and he would suddenly pounce on a spot in the grass, then come up with a mouse in his jaws. I bet he killed hundreds of mice in his life, and he was pretty rough on the local rabbit population, too.
csziggy
(34,136 posts)The pig "huts" were just pieces of old tin propped up on sticks. By the time we got around to cleaning up the pig pens, the sticks had fallen down and the tin was just on the ground, perfect homes for rats.
The guys working for us invented the game "Bat the Rat" - they'd flip over a piece of tin and see how many rats they could whack before the rats found a new shelter. We had a part Labrador dog named Bud that took a few tries to learn the game. First time, he grabbed a rat and carried it away to finish off. Then he watched what the guys had been doing. About the third piece of tin, Bud had the idea - kill all the rats he could and deal with the remains later.
Although Bud was too big to be as quick as the dogs in the video, he got pretty good at finishing off the rates. By the time we started loading up pieces of tin to haul off, there were few rats left in that area. The survivors moved into the fields which were unpicked corn. I'd go out, start at the edges and mow the fields, spiraling into the middle. By the time I was down that last swath of corn stalks, the red tailed hawks were hovering overhead and would stoop on any rodents (rats and rabbits) that had sheltered in that last strip of shelter.
We no longer have the big cotton rats that were here. We still have mice but the barn cats keep them under control.
DesertAuthor
(14 posts)The pooch had best intentions, but just needs a little more practice.
True Dough
(17,305 posts)DesertAuthor? So, like, you write recipes and stuff?
tblue37
(65,354 posts)True Dough
(17,305 posts)You'll notice the in my post above!