
|
Mole Wars III
The saga continues!!!
May 05, 2010 -
A long, long time ago, in a yard not far enough away, the grass grew
green and lush; worms and grubs lived in peace. Life was good for
many a moon.
Then I bought the property. And, the forces of
darkness marshalled their forces. And Mole Wars began. Worms and
grubs were murdered unmercifully. The lush green grass was
crisscrossed with yellow, the only reason I knew the moles were
back! (You can't hear grubs and worms scream for help.)
I am
becoming battle-fatigued. It has been four years of skirmishes.
Thing is, I thought I had won the war last spring. I brought in a
hired gun to protect the Double R (Rush Ranch) and before long the
desperados were bushwhacked, dry-gulched, trapped, hung out to dry,
kilt-dead.
And, once again the worms and grubs were free to
roam the space a few inches below the greening grasslands of the
Double R. Discouraging words were seldom heard. Then it snowed.
Winter hit and under the cover over white stuff, the blind
furies returned!
Just so my neighbors know, I have not
suffered some mentally debilitating injury. I am not insane. I was
not, earlier in the spring, in some macabre-like trance, dancing to
a beat only I could hear.
I was merely taking the war back to
the moles. I was saving the worms and the grubs, smashing tunnels,
sending the VC back to . . . ahem . . . I was prepping my yard for
spring cleanup.
Grounds keeper and exterminator
extaordinaire, Bill Murray once said you had to know your enemy to
vanquish him. In the last four or so years, I have learned plenty of
my enemy, Scalopus Aquaticus -- the common Eastern Mole.
Moles, besides living in dirt, are solitary varmints. They continue
tunneling and eating and hookup with other moles in the winter, have
babies in May and then go on their way, by themselves, tunneling and
eating. (In that respect, I like to think of them as the great white
sharks of the dirt world.) Come to think about it, moles is just as
dangerous as them thar' great whites, with their black eyes all
rolled up, full of death. Heck, I almost twisted my ankle stomping
on one of their tunnels.
And, just like in the movie Jaws, I
needed to find me a Captain Quint. Somebody colorful, somebody who
knew funny songs about bowlegged women, and had a way with the
Queen's English that would make her blush. I needed a man who wasn't
afraid to get dirty.
A few evenings ago, I shone the
Molelight up into the dark night sky. The distress signal worked.
The next morning Dave Kugler drove up my driveway in his shiny,
white pickup truck.
While not quite as colorful as Capt.
Quint, Dave knows his moles. He knows their habits. He knows their
patterns. He knows how to get rid of 'em. Oh, and he is tenacious.
He won't get eaten by what he's chasing like Quint. (And if he does,
it is time to sell the house.)
Dave, who owns and operates
Critter Catchers, Inc., toured the battlefield, whipped out a hand
trowel, dug some holes and laid some traps. Three traps to start.
The moles tunneled deeper.
Six traps set.
The
moles dug deeper.
Then Captain Kugler got smart. He feigned
retreat. He let the moles think they had won, that they could keep
on eating the peace-loving worms and grubs. Kugler, pulled four
traps, leaving only two.
A day later I received word . . .
actually three word-likes. The message was simple and to the point,
but I knew it's meaning. "Hhe-hhe-hhe."
* * *
Meanwhile, back at the ranch, spring is in full bloom, and so are
the flowers. The lilacs perfume the yard and the grass is healing
itself. Yellowed tunnels are turning green. Dave, the worms and
grubs all send their love and gratitude.
If you have a
problem with any critter, give Dave a call, 248-432-2712; or go
on-line and check out
www.crittercatchersinc.com. Click around, and you will also be
able to watch a 30 second video of a mole at work.
By: Don Rush
Sherman Publications, May 5, 2010
|
 |