Our Observatory Clinic is in desperate need! Due to a combination of heavy water damage, squirrels, and dog and cat damage we were forced to gut our clinic and re-do it completely. We have re-insulated and run new electric and water, but now have run out of funds to finish it. In hindsight, we never should have gutted it before getting the estimate to put it back together. It is a mess and we have been without our clinic since June. We desperately need funds to put it back together again – drywall, wood paneling, Paint, lights, new windows, a new floor and repairs around the door are desperately needed. We aren’t able to employ Scouts for the work needed from here on since this type of work calls for professionals. The estimate to complete this work is $12,000. We welcome donations by contractors to complete this work.
Author: Elise Able
Limited Edition 2008 Foofye Calendars are Now Available!
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For that special little dog in your life, or that friend that has everything… 12 months of the cutest little dog in the world. Foofye will also autograph and sign photos for her fans. Only $24.00 but hurry, this is a Limited Edition! Foofye will probably be famous soon and you will have this calendar from “before” the fame! It might be worth lots of money some day.
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In Memory of Lucy
In fond memory of “Lucy” our ancient Silver fox that was humanely euthanized November 14th 2007. She was never ill a day in her life and never missed a meal until her last day. I estimated her age to be at least 17 years. Lucy was a very valuable asset to Fox Wood because through the years she was a surrogate mother to hundreds of orphaned fox pups. She was kind and gentle to the babies and would feed them before she would feed herself. Our fox pups grew up very wild because of Lucy. They never knew that food came from human hands.
Limited Edition Foofye Calendars Available Soon!
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The cutest Little Dog in the World is featured in this Annual Calendar. the perfect gift for someone who loves little dogs! Order your now, only $24.00. Pay through Paypal to foxladye@yahoo.com or send us an e-mail request! See Fall Foliage Foofye, Blind Foofye,Stuffed Toy Foofye, Crocodile Foofye, Red Frock Foofye, Windblown Foofye and many more Photos of The Cutest Little Dog in the World!
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Coming Soon!
Was it Really Feral Dogs and Not Coyotes?
Coyotes are blamed for a lot of things that they do not do, that is a fact. Recently a local New York farmer believed that coyotes attacked calves in his barn at night. Due to the fact that the calves were bitten all over and not actually eaten or dragged away and devoured, leads experts to believe that it was actually free roaming dogs. Dogs bite and chase and will go after multiple animals. Dogs chase and kill for fun. A coyote “MO” is different. They take one and eat what they kill- either right there or by dragging it off.
Some late-breaking news on the case of the Chautauqua County Fred J. Cusimano Westside Overland Trail regarding the two dogs that were killed while running free while their owner snowshoed on a remote wildlife trail… I am currently investigating a reliable report that these were not coyotes that attacked the labs and killed them, but rather a pack feral dogs that had been causing problems in the area for a period of time. I will be investigating this and if I find out that it was indeed wild dogs, I will be sure to contact the media and make sure they do a factual report on this new information. I will either confirm or deny this report after some research.
Hot Off The Press!!!!!
Our New Spring 2007 Newsletter! Check it out!
Fox Wood Newsletter Spring 2007
Click above to Download the pdf version
Cougars in Busti, NY?
Once again, a “cougar story” is circulating the Southern tier area in New York. The pictures attached to the e-mail have been circulating for years! The same exact photos circulated a few years back as being taken at a cabin in Steuben County by a woman who owns the cabin. They, and the whole “cougar story” are pure BS. The photos are old and circulated in Michigan many years back along with the same kind of story, trying to make people believe they were taken there recently. The photos were actually taken at a cabin out in Lander Wyoming by Dr. Dave Rogers. It appears that the writer of this original e-mail also thinks that Pumas, Mountain lions and cougars are all different types of animals.. Check out this link and read about the photos and story circulated on the internet, as well as about the true story about the photos:
http://www.snopes.com/photos/animals/patiomountainlion.asp
The local game wardens keep denying they released cougars because they didn’t release cougars. they didn’t release coyotes either, but they just can’t stop folks from making stories up and trying to create hysteria. Unfortunately gullible people will always believe this stuff and perpetuate it.
Read the recently circulated e-mail hoax below:
These pictures where taken of a Puma/Mountain Lion on Hoag Rd. Feb. 17th 2007 outside of Busti, NY . This is in our area! I have heard many people talking about spotting mountain lions and puma’s running around in the area, but the New York State Game Warden keeps denying it. They keep re-enforcing that it’s rumors and that they have not released these types of animals into our area to control the population of the coyotes. Well here is the proof!
I know I saw something that looked like a puma, which I believe can also look from a distance like a cougar/mountain lion about a year ago running across Hunt Rd . I had to do a double take, just the way it moved I knew it wasn’t a dog nor a fox! It’s obvious the women who took these pictures did not frighten off the wild cat with the flash from the camera as well as her presence. I’m just wondering; did these people who released these big cats into our area ever stop to think about the possibility of the cat’s not going after the coyote population and maybe going after domestic animals and possibly small Children, hey why not even a person jogging thru the woods or on a country road.
As described from the photo’s , the wild cat was on this woman’s deck on Hoag Rd. interested in her two domestic cats that just happen to be sitting on the inside of that very thin glass door. It’s obvious the large cat is not scared of the human or domestic presence! That really worries me! I know there is something in our woods behind Sunset Dr, in the area of Baker St, Shadyside Rd, and Hunt Rd. in Busti/Lakewood, NY. A few years back my parent’s boxer (dog) was attacked by something that left a nice laceration on her back and back leg area, causing her to get stitches. Well I know I don’t feel too safe walking around outside at night!
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Coyotes Deserve Better
As a wildlife professional I was sickened by the treatment the injured coyote at the Macedon plaza received from Rochester, NY animal control , police and of course, the hunters themselves. I was also disappointed with the news report and sensationalism that made it seem as though coyotes are dangerous and a problem. Even worse, I am sickened by the coyote hunting that is allowed to go on. This hunting and killing is creating the very problems that the hunters claim to be trying to solve. To make things worse, the coyote was dragged with a noose across the parking lot and thrown into a cage on the back of the hunters truck, then taken out later and shot or “euthanized” as the press wrote. what a horrible, tragic death for this animal that has done no wrong.
The only thing that will control coyote populations is less available food. Less food means less coyotes, it is a very simple concept- and it is free and requires no killing. History and numerous biological studies have proven over and over again that trying to control coyote populations by killing them is like trying to put out a fire with kerosene. The more coyotes that are killed, the more females produce pups that year, and they have larger their litters. These pups have a larger percentage of survivability. Larger litters need larger prey to feed them – deer hunters, are you listening?
Don’t let the coyote hunters fool you – they are not doing you any favors- They are the ones creating this problem by hunting and killing coyotes- and for fun no less.
Are there too many deer or not enough deer? Hunters can’t seem to make up their minds. My guess is, depending on whether the hunter gets his tags filled or not becomes the determination. If there are too many deer in a “green space” area, then what is the problem with coyotes being there to naturally thin the population? Society can easily watch a deer being shot, or hit by a car, but can’t stand to see one being taken down by a natural predator? The coyotes are here because there is a lot of food. When the food availability goes down, the coyote population will go down naturally with it and we will have Peace and Harmony once again- but we must allow it to happen naturally, without getting involved or it becomes a disaster.
Leashed dogs don’t kill wildlife and aren’t killed by wildlife
I feel compelled to comment on the news story of the two dogs killed by a group of five coyotes in the Fred J. Cusimano Westside Overland Trail. According to a popular Trail Guide, This long-distance linear trail strings through a series of state forests in Chautauqua County. The multiple trailheads allow hikers to vary the hike’s length; established shelters allow overnight stays and stargazing. Special attractions: Changing forest, meadow and pond habitats, agricultural easements, rural and forest views, wildlife, solitude, overnight shelters.
Apparently a cross country skier brought along his two dogs. Somewhere along the way, the dogs met with wildlife (coyotes) and the dogs were killed. Naturally, the press is all over this, with scary headlines and reports of “groups of coyotes killing domestic animals”- naturally this is all designed to make watchers tune in and gasp at the horror of their story, after all, it IS the news. The ones that will ultimately pay the price will be the coyotes- All coyotes.
While I certainly sympathize with any individual who loses a dog in a tragic manner, Coyotes are not to blame here. This is a wildlife area. If the dogs were under their owners control as they should have been, instead of running at large, this would never have happened. Human presence is a strong deterrent to wildlife/ domestic animal confrontations in any situation. I did hear that one of these dogs were partially eaten by the time the owner had arrived on the scene- there must have been quite a elapse of time for one of the animals to have been partially eaten. Why was the owner so far away from his dogs? Did his dogs begin the chase? This is not a case where the owner and leashed dogs were strolling through suburbia or the city and were attacked by coyotes. This is a case where while cross country skiing in a wildlife area, uncontrolled dogs running at large met with a tragic end. Dogs running at large not only often kill wildlife, but can be killed themselves by a variety of means, coyotes being one of them. If we are going to demonize coyotes, then we must also demonize automobiles, people with guns, snares set by trappers, poisons, attacks by other domestic dogs, bobcats and all other means with which dogs running at large are killed. The fact that this attack by coyotes is newsworthy is proof of the rarity of this event. Dogs getting hit by cars, shot, caught in traps or poisoned is certainly not newsworthy because it happens every day, yet people still allow their dogs to run loose. Keep your dogs safe from being killed by one of many different means by keeping them leashed and under control at all times.
The guys who like to hunt and trap coyotes for sport are pounding their chests and looking for praise from the general public frightened by the graphic news story. “See? they say ” See? We told you so!” they brag. “Coyotes are dangerous animals, they are going to eat your children – but us manly men will protect you by killing them!” Little does the general public realize that the surge in the resulting coyote deaths will cause the coyote population to jump in response to the killing. Trying to control coyotes by killing them is like trying to put out a fire with kerosene. They will breed faster and more indiscriminately, having larger litters and populations will then be skewed to the young. Larger litters need larger prey to feed them. Larger numbers of young coyotes will create more trouble, as it is generally young coyotes that are culprits when and if the rare event of trouble arises.
So just what is the solution? If you don’t want your domestic animals harmed, keep them close. Most parks have rules that require dogs to be leashed at all times. A leashed dog doesn’t kill wildlife and a leashed dog isn’t killed by wildlife. Usually, where dogs are concerned, it is the wildlife that ends up dead and mauled by the dogs, this story has a little different twist for once.