Which one is regal?
“Oh boy, a wild critter in my backyard! My favorite thing!”
I glanced out the window to my back deck last week and saw only the backside of a furry animal—bigger than a breadbox—running down the steps. I bolted to my sliding glass door, opened it slowly, and then tip-toed to the top of the steps. The critter in question, a bobcat, stood at the bottom, surveying his domain. A minute later, he and I would have a face-off.
“Oh, no,” I thought. “That natural-born hunter is stalking squirrels in my backyard. Look out, squirrels!”
I love seeing bobcats, hawks, golden eagles, owls, coyotes, foxes, and other predators in our mountains. Have you been lucky enough to spot a pygmy owl on the hunt? Google them, and photos of the adorable birds will delight your eyes. Pygmy owls eat pretty songbirds, but nobody’s perfect.
Predator animals, like pest management professionals, do the important work of hunting rodents. We work inside the home; they work outside—that’s man and nature working in harmony. We love our work, and I’ll bet forest predators love the thrill of the chase, too.
Feeling playful, I followed my furry visitor. Calling softly and walking gently, I crept closer and closer behind. “Warning! Bobcat! Warning! Bobcat!” blue jays squawked from the safety of trees.
To my surprise, the bobcat didn’t run for cover. At thirty feet away, he turned to face me, sat on the ground, and folded his paws in front. I stopped in my tracks. Silence.
For a few seconds, we shared a moment. The bobcat studied me, and I studied him. We were two professional rodent hunters, two peas in a pod, enjoying a sunny day in the San Bernardino Mountains. One of us was young, handsome, and regal, and the other, well… maybe not so much. You guess which was which.
Wrong answer, people! Have a young and regal week, everyone!










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