We have new neighbors.
They poked their heads up from under the deck outside the screen door of the a-frame. Woodchuck (groundhog) pups making themselves at home.

Woodchucks at the cabin
It was Groundhog day all over again at the cabin. Years before we inhabited the place, a woodchuck had decided to come inside the cabin. The humans were away when Wilbur — we’ll call him Wilbur — abandoned the family under the deck to settle more comfortably inside the cabin. Maybe Wilber needed to get away awhile.
Kay and I come to the cabin to get away. Now we want to get away from the woodchucks — or have Wilbur and his family taken far away from us in traps baited with luscious carrots, fresh lettuce, celery, and other yummies that doesn’t grow naturally here along the marsh’s edge.
The pups are kind of cute, in a non-dog kind of way, if you love all Nature. “Something there is that loves a [woodchuck],” wrote Robert Frost one night, revising his “Mending Wall” poem when three woodchuck pups after he’d had too much wine. Or maybe Frost had just read Psalm 50, as I did this morning, the day after the pups introduced themselves to Kay: “All the beasts of the forest are mine…. I know every bird in the sky, and the creatures under your deck are in my sight” (Psalm 50:10-11).
Many years ago a woodchuck was eating all the lettuce in the Broomall Nursing Home garden up the street from my boyhood home on Church Lane. When Wade, the nursing home caretaker, complained about the disappearing lettuce, two excited eight year-olds decided to become the good stewards of Wade’s garden. With Wade’s help, Ted Bonsall and I built a box trap of wood and hardware wire, and caught the woodchuck. But, hey, what do you do with the woodchuck you just removed from the nursing home garden? Ted and I were advanced planners, we had built a large cage of wood and chicken wire in the backyard. Having succeeded as trappers, we turned the woodchuck loose from the box-trap into the large cage loaded with carrots, broccoli, and lettuce. The next morning, the cage was empty!
There’s a reason they call a woodchuck a woodchuck. It had gnawed through the wood and the chicken wire on its way to freedom, relieving us of having to answer the bigger question of what to do with a woodchuck when the snow starts falling. The woodchuck got away from us before we wanted to get away from it.
Sixty-seven years later, I wonder whether the Wilbur in Minnesota ever made a prison break in Pennsylvania.
- Gordon C. Stewart, Chaska, northern Minnesota, June 8, 2018.
I needed a good laugh tonite, and you and the woodchuck caused it!! A woodchuck is a lot better than a copperhead snake which we recently found dead in the yard.
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At least he was dead. And you can sell the copper!
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He found you!! After all those years!! I think there is cash to be made from this engaging story….CA volunteers to edit😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
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Yes, Barb. And he’s really old for a woodchuck who’s been on the LAM all these years. I CA would like to edit, ask her what she might charge. On second thought, don’t even mention it! I already owe her all my savings.😂
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They’re cute, Gordon! We have wildlife of a slightly larger variety here in our neighborhood at the moment…a mama black bear and twin cubs. Exciting to see, but I don’t want to be out walking the dogs and find myself between mama and her babies…. Enjoy that beautiful setting!
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Watch out for that bear mama, Lori! I saw a black bear on our property a week ago.
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Will do. Cubs are adorable…from a distance.
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They are! Woodchuck pups not quite so much They can ruin the foundation of a house and, so far as I know, no one’s ever taught a woodchuck pup to sit or give them their paw.
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Laughing…the destruction is not funny, but the image of a woodchuck pup sitting or shaking a paw is amusing…
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News flash! A trapper named Charlie will arrive in the next 24 hours. If the pups don’t sit or give them his paws ….
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