Stories from the Stringam Family Ranches of Southern Alberta

From the 50s and 60s to today . . .



Tuesday, September 4, 2018

Mostly Spiky

C'mon. Give us a snuggle!
Porcupines. Not so cute and cuddly any more.
Or ever.
Maybe I should explain . . .
On a ranch, though I've heard that their meat - like pork - is quite sweet and tasty, porcupines serve no useful purpose.
Actually, anywhere, they really don’t accomplish much that could be considered ‘good’.
Herbivores, they nibble new trees to death. Devour plant life and generally make nuisances of themselves in a ‘shredding the garden’ way.
They also intimidate the livestock. It is this last that is the most aggravating.
Because said livestock have to then be rescued.
Sigh.
My dad and a hired man, Dale, were checking the herd.
It was winter.
Now I should probably explain, because it will be pertinent later, that in Southern Alberta, in winter, snow falls. It just doesn’t stay where it fell.
On average, parts of Southern Alberta have 13 to 14 windless days in the year.
13 to 14.
I probably don’t need to point out that that leaves 351 to 352 windy days.
Now you know why snow doesn’t stay where it’s put.
Back to my story . . .
On this particular day, Dad and Dale came across a cow with a face full of porcupine quills.
Ouch.
She had obviously allowed curiosity to overcome her sense. Wait. I’m talking about a cow here. She had obviously let her curiosity have free rein and discovered the folly of sniffing porcupines.
The quills had been embedded both in and outside her mouth, making grazing impossible. The poor animal was standing there. Sore. Hungry. And downright miserable.
Dad and Dale removed the quills, then decided to hunt down the culprit.
It’s a rancher thing.
They found him a short distance away, happily sunning himself in the branches of a chokecherry bush.
Breaking off branches of the bush, Dad and Dale closed in for the ‘kill’. Or at least the ‘drive the varmint to the nearest far-away place’.
Here’s where the blown snow comes in. The wind had deposited most of a recent snowfall into those same bushes. Dad found himself chest-deep in the stuff as he approached.
But thinking he’d simply knock the critter off its branch and scare it away, he really wasn’t concerned.
Big mistake.
Did you know that porcupines, far from being the shy, retiring animals they appear, are actually quite aggressive?
Make a note of it.
The porcupine hit the snow and, moving astonishingly easily over the great drifts, immediately turned and headed straight for dad’s face.
Which was, in baseball speak, right in the ‘strike zone’.
Unable to move in the chest-deep snow, Dad watched in horror as the angry little monster came right for him.
He closed his eyes.
Then heard the ‘whump’ of something striking a soft body. And the even more welcome sound of said soft body landing some distance away. Far out of the face prickling ‘oh-my-heck-this-is-going-to-hurt’ zone.
He opened his eyes.
Dale had swooped in at the last minute and hit the ball out of the park.
So to speak.
The disgruntled porcupine, realizing that it was no match for two branch-wielding opponents, tossed one last glare in their general direction and headed, quite literally, for the hills.
Mission accomplished.
Porcupine troubles?
Grab a branch and follow me!

9 comments:

  1. Porcupines look like very scary animals - not the cute little hedgehogs we see on Pinterest or the lovely Aussie echidna!

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  2. Who Knew they were aggressive, in the comics they do not appear that way!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Yikes, I had a fear of porcupines before but now that I know they're aggressive . . .

    ReplyDelete
  4. An ouch averted. For your father anyway.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Wow. Thank God your father was saved. Can't imagine anything more torturous!

    ReplyDelete
  6. "Whump" I like that bit of your story and can imagine the ball, um, porcupine sailing off into the distance. I have read in novels of stone age times that porcupine quills were among the first needles used when people were first learning to fit skins together as clothing. Used first as awls for making holes for sinews to be threaded through then perhaps one had a convenient hole in the less pointy end for someone to think the sinew could be passed through along with the awl via the hole. so at least the porcupine was a semi useful animal once upon a time.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I have read that porcupines are perhaps the best survival meat for those lost in the wild, due to their slowness and the fact that they are vegetarians - their meat can be eaten raw if necessary. Anyway, it's good that your dad avoided a face full of quills! I hope the porcupine was okay after his sudden lift off.

    ReplyDelete
  8. oh jeeeeze that would've hurt! Yay Dale!

    ReplyDelete

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