The leaves are all down, except for a black willow at the end of our street. It is time to notice other things on our walks. Like squirrel nests!
The city park is filled with oak trees which feed the squirrels.
We have the Eastern Grey Squirrels and Fox Squirrels I remember from growing up, but now there are more black squirrels than any other.
I researched why they have appeared in Michigan and discovered that they had been introduced intentionally! Their color helps to protect them during the cold winters and so they have thrived.
According to Wikipedia, the black morphs had nearly disappeared when John Harvey Kellogg decided to repopulate Battle Creek, MI, with the black Eastern Gray Squirrel in 1915. In 1958 and 1962, the black morphs were trapped at the Kellogg Biological Station and released on the Michigan State University campus! They were also reintroduced at Kent State University in Ohio.
Where there are squirrels and bunnies and chippies (and yes, skunk, opossum, raccoon, rats, and mice, too) there will be raptors. Our city is filled with all of these creatures.
Today we saw this hawk circling our street.
I have seen a hawk sitting in a tree, watching a squirrel. The squirrel was distraught, wanting to go into its nest but he knew the hawk was there. He ran up and down the lower trunk while the hawk flew from branch to branch. Lucky for the would-be prey, the hawk grew bored and flew to other feeding grounds.
A number of winters ago there was a hawk on our roof holding a frozen rate. Last summer I saw the peregrine falcon winging overhead.
On a community Facebook page I mentioned seeing raptors in the city and one person was aghast. She thought 'velociraptor' not hawks!
Telephone lines and fences and houses and garages block our view from the house, but the sunsets and sunrises are easier to see now the leaves are down.
I have so many 'win' books that have not arrived! Instead, I received a book that was a total surprise! Jane Smiley's new novel
Perestroika in Paris sounds like a charming read!
To come is
The Land of Big Numbers by Te-Ping-Chen, stories from China, from BookishFirst. And new on my NetGalley shelf is
Susan, Linda, Nina, and Cokie: The Extraordinary Story of the Founding Mothers of NPR by Lisa Napoli.
I will soon have another quilt top completed, I started a small embroidery project, and am toying with doing some painting.
There is plenty to keep me busy as we self-isolate. Michigan and our county has seen escapating Covid-19 cases.
Over 329,00 cases and 8,875 deaths in Michigan.
Over 40,000 cases in Oakland County and 1,310 deaths.
Our city has 260 cases and 18 deaths total, 217.03 positive cases per 10,000 people.
Sadly, I now can say I know someone with Covid, along with knowing many people who has a family member that became ill, and several people who lost loved ones.
Stay safe, out there. Use a mask. Stay home. Better to miss one Thanksgiving than to lose a family member.