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larose forest photos | all galleries >> WILDLIFE (including birds, mammals and reptiles and amphibians) (18 Galleries) >> Wildlife around Ottawa-Quebec (9 sub-galleries) >> Muskrat and Beaver > Muskrat (Ondatra zibethicus)
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12-DEC-2009 Christine Hanrahan

Muskrat (Ondatra zibethicus)

Nortel woods area. This little guy was running down the side of one of the roads at the Nortel campus. I was worried that he was going to get hit, so I stopped, grabbed my camera for a few shots, and tried to herd him up the bank. Initially, he turned to run back the way he had come, but then as I got closer, he hopped towards me, almost like a kangaroo, and attacked my boot! Not very viciously and not very hard, but clearly trying to scare me off. I had to admire his guts. I am many times bigger than he (he was the size of a young kitten). When that didn't work, he turned around and ran back the way he'd been going at first. A car came along and I told him this was not going to work, he couldn't stay on the road. He must have read my mind, because he turned and scrambled up the snowy bank and near the top he dove into the snow and vanished. There is a pond on the other side so I hope he was able to get there safely and find some way under the water, for it was all frozen. By rights, he should have been safely in his own little muskrat house.

I was intrigued by the large size of his hind feet, not having noted this so clearly before. I could also see his partially webbed feet, an adaptation to his semi-aquatic lifestyle. A beautiful little guy, perfectly adapted for his own environment, but not for that of roads and cars.

Canon PowerShot SX10 IS
1/160s f/5.6 at 74.3mm iso100 hide exif
Full EXIF Info
Date/Time12-Dec-2009 12:32:20
MakeCanon
ModelCanon PowerShot SX10 IS
Flash UsedNo
Focal Length74.3 mm
Exposure Time1/160 sec
Aperturef/5.6
ISO Equivalent100
Exposure Bias
White Balance
Metering Modematrix (5)
JPEG Quality
Exposure Program
Focus Distance

other sizes: small medium large original auto
Antonio19-Sep-2010 04:32
Never seen one of these, even in magazines; smthg between a big rat and a beaver it seems...
Jean Chiasson23-Mar-2010 22:29
Beautiful close up Christine vote
Guest 13-Feb-2010 06:19
What a cute little guy. Wonderful story to go with this one Christine. Great how you got him looking straight at you. Nice and sharp. You are always doing good deed for our precious wildlife. Many forget they were here before we were. Great shot. Vote :)
Carol Rollins05-Feb-2010 06:06
This is a great shot Christine. He's wonderful. So glad you took the time to direct him
off the dangerous road. ~
LynnH19-Jan-2010 16:23
I'm so glad you took the time to save this little guy!!! Great shot! V
Serena Bowles13-Jan-2010 21:23
Aww, what a gorgeous little fella. Well done you for helping him to safer ground V
Marisa Livet13-Jan-2010 10:26
I like both, the photo and the description of your " meeting" with the little guy. He looks very determined in all cases. It's the way to remain alive !
Patrick Goossens13-Jan-2010 09:07
They look cute, but I was once bitten by one. Here they are hunted down because they damage the riverbanks and dikes.V
Len08-Jan-2010 02:46
Terrific close-up and descriptive encounter,well done!!V.
Guest 14-Dec-2009 21:21
Wow, how lovely what an amazing shot he is looking straight into the camera, cute little guy his fur look so thick like the few snowflakes on him
Gillian13-Dec-2009 02:18
Wow! What a gorgeous close-up. Truly amazing (as is your whole encounter with him!) V
slhoornstra12-Dec-2009 22:53
A masterpiece of clarity. Christine. Truly a wonderful shot!!!! BV
Mairéad12-Dec-2009 22:11
This is a really clear shot of this cute little guy with great details. And a great
story too - glad you succeeded in herding him in the direction of safety. V
Margot W12-Dec-2009 22:10
At first I thought it was a beaver. Yes what big back feet.
V
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