My mom once saved a hamster from being roadkill. It was a fall evening, and my mother, my sister, and I were on our way to Montgomery Ward, which for those of you under the age of 50 was a discount department store. There was a major intersection near our house, bordered on three corners by pear orchards, with a shopping center on the fourth. As we waited at the stoplight, we saw a small critter in the streetlights, skittering back and forth in the middle of the intersection.
“What is that? Is that an animal?”
“It’s a hamster! Mom, it’s a hamster! It’s going to get run over!”
So Mom pulled over, grabbed an empty black paper Montgomery Ward bag, and made her way to the middle of the intersection. Somehow she managed to shoo the rodent into the open bag and avoid being roadkill herself. We folded down the bag, and Mom drove us home. To me and my sister, this was all perfectly logical. Something needed saving, so we saved it.
“Daddy, we found a hamster!”
“Mom saved it! It’s in this bag!”
My poor father was beleaguered his entire life by the shear number of non-human living beings that found their way to our home. He just hated it, and we ignored his hating it.
With a heavy sigh he took the bag, and looked in.
“Oh for criminy sakes, that’s a gopher!”
“Are you sure?”
“Yes, the teeth!”, he cried, making a gopher face with his front teeth hanging over his lower lip. “You risked your life for a damn gopher! Get rid of it!”
“Oh. Rats.” Lisa and I were disappointed. We thought we had a new pet.
We drove to one of the pear orchards, and set our rescued friend free, before continuing our journey to Montgomery Ward.
Fast forward about fifty years.
Montgomery Ward is history,, but I have a gopher in my backyard! He’s really cute, and he does look a lot like a hamster, except of course for two huge long teeth.
I don’t begrudge the gopher a little space. Our dog Ziggy, however, thinks Digger, as I call him, is here to play. At first, there were just one or two gopher holes. But then Ziggy would stick his nose in a hole as far as it would go, and start frantically digging. At one point he dug so deep his entire head was in a hole. Digger doesn’t like the intrusion, so every time Ziggy digs, so does Digger. Add to that Roy, who is much like Ziggy, maniacally running around shooting airsoft pellets down the holes, and you’ve got one very busy gopher.
There are two problems with this. One, my lawn is a mess of holes. And two, Ziggy keeps bringing a ton of mud into the house and it’s a heavy job keeping up with the transfer of topsoil indoors.
He actually caught Digger once, and we all frantically ran outside to rescue him from Ziggy’s jaws. Well, Julia and I were on a rescue mission. Jackson and Roy were just bloodthirsty.
“Drop it!” I commanded in my mom voice. Ziggy does not like my mom voice.
He did drop Digger, it was my mom voice, after all, and one of the kids corralled Ziggy and locked him in the house. We were terrified Digger was mortally wounded. His fur was wet, but we couldn’t tell if he had been punctured.
“You should have just let me shoot him!” Roy said hopefully, lifting his airsoft gun.
“Let me put him out of his misery,” Jackson said, grabbing a shovel.
“No, it wouldn’t be quick, you’d have to keep hacking at him!” I cried. “Let him go home and die in peace.”
So we watched as Digger dug just a little, then stopped and stared at us, although I understand gophers have very poor vision. Then he turned, and dug a little more, stopped, dug some more, until pretty soon he had a small depression, and he hunkered down in it. Then he frantically dug at one end of his little depression until he connected with one of his tunnels, and disappeared.
Ziggy still sniffed the holes, which we tried to fill in, but Digger was gone.
Until…he was back.
Digger was only gone for a few days before he returned full force, and Ziggy was on the prowl. As Ziggy dug into Digger’s fresh holes, Digger would just move along with new holes, thus spreading the destruction, and the dirt, like before.
Jerry bought a “Gopher Hawk”, a trap that drives a spike through the gopher like a stake through a vampire’s heart. I forbade him from using it. I didn’t want to kill Digger, I just wanted him to move along. Instead, I bought two live traps, baited them, and set them outside fresh holes. Following the instructions, I was careful to use gloves so the traps didn’t smell like human. Every couple of days I moved the traps to whatever holes looked freshest. Jerry had also bought stakes that make noises only the gopher can hear, and moved them periodically.
This went on for some time with no progress, and Jerry was foaming at the mouth to use his Gopher Hawk. Then, we saw fresh holes on the far side of the lawn, quite a distance from the original mess. Ziggy was immediately sniffing and digging for gold. Um, gopher.
And that’s the last we saw of Digger. I was pretty sure the new holes were just a stop on his way under the fence to our neighbor’s yard. The old woman who owns that house had a major stroke a couple of years ago, and no longer ventures outdoors. Her pot smoking grandsons and their girlfriends have moved in. No way they will even notice any holes in the yard.
Well, so long Digger. Maybe the neighbors are growing pot back there and you can get yourself some good cannabis roots. Mellow out, chill in your tunnels. Party on, dude.
Except…it was a clever gopher ruse.
Observe along the rose bushes that border the house in the other direction, through the weeds and to the other fence.
Little piles of dirt in a line. Then, a perfect gopher hole, and another, closer and closer to the fence.
No, Digger, no! Abort, abort!
Not that direction!
Because on the other side of that fence, is the most perfect yard ever. If I took a photo, you would think it was photoshopped. Pests don’t dare cross the line. No weeds dare grow. Nobody will be furtively trying to return a Gopher Hawk to Amazon in that house. They probably have an entire arsenal of extermination weapons.
I put out the humane traps again, but obviously Digger’s tiny brain works better than I gave him credit for.
Ziggy showed no interest in these holes, not even sniffing, so it could be too late. I’m still keeping a close watch, however. Because in that area of our yard are raised vegetable beds. You see where I’m going with this. If I find vegetables being eaten from the roots up, we are going to have a problem, my little friend and I. Don’t mess with my food source, dude. I have food aggression. There’s still an unopened Gopher Hawk in my entry hall.
Don’t make me use it, Digger. Don’t make me use it.