Sunday, October 5, 2025
Over the Wall
The weather is quiet as I write this -- quite a change from the past few days. We had a full day of rain on Friday, followed by terrific gusty winds yesterday, all from Storm Amy. London was under wind warnings, and all of the Royal Parks -- like Hyde Park, Regents Park and others -- were closed. I looked out occasionally to see the poor avocado tree almost bent double, even though it's in a protected spot on the patio. I'd swear the pot was tipping a bit, as heavy as it is. As far as I can tell we had no damage, but I heard a lot of sirens so I imagine others did.
Despite the wind I did some gardening in the morning. I trimmed the lavender and the buddleia outside the back door, so we can actually see the garden from the living room. I reduced the buddleia's height by about half, which will give us more sunlight indoors. We cut them back every year anyway, usually in February.
The balletic squirrels -- which have already figured out how to join the pigeons in emptying our seed feeder -- have also discovered our suet balls. Argh!
I did laundry, changed the sheets, washed the bathroom rugs. I read about half of John Green's book "Everything is Tuberculosis," a nonfiction history of the disease. It's an unusual topic for John Green -- he's better known for YA fiction books like "The Fault in Our Stars" -- but it's interesting and I'm liking it. I could recommend it to students who are interested in medicine.
Here's the latest from our garden cam. Last week I positioned it to capture the back corner of the garden where all the animals come and go. There's a big plastic compost bin back there that we don't use, and I've always assumed that the animals jump on it to get over the wall. But as you'll see in the video, they don't need to! They mostly just jump right up on the wall itself.
High points:
1. The video starts with Blackie, who goes from our garden over the fence into Mrs. Kravitz's. Pale Cat -- who is actually white and orange, as you'll see -- is tempted to follow a few hours later, but jumps back down into our garden. (Those first few shots, I had the camera positioned too close to the bin, but then I moved it back to get a better view.)
2. At 0:46, we see Bell the Bengal on the ground. Watch closely the top of the wall at upper right, and you'll see another animal checking her out. I can't tell if it's a fox or Pale Cat.
3. At 1:24, a squirrel runs up the tree, across the fence and around the corner. The squirrels use the back wall as a highway, as well as the larger animals. (I deleted 95 percent of squirrel videos, as well as many of the cats, believe it or not. There's only so much of that you need to see, and I probably still gave you too much cat.)
4. At 1:38 the fox shows up, and proves itself just as agile as the cats.
5. At 3:13 the fox returns for several shots, including one in the rain. (It does not look happy.)
6. At 4:49, the fox is in the rain again, giving its fur a shake.
7. At 5:02 we end with Blackie, once again crossing the fence to Mrs. Kravitz's.
You might be interested to see where the animals are going once they jump up on that wall.
As you can see, there's a corrugated roof on the other side (covering some garage or storage sheds for the flats behind us), as well as the brick wall, which I believe continues past several properties well down the block. A land of adventure for the critters, even though it's pretty brushy in places!
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It was stormy here yesterday, but we were still able to go walking until the rain started, cautiously avoiding the woods. It was also unusually warm at about 20C, and in the sun I was able to walk in short sleeves and carry my rain jacket instead of wearing it. The night brought thunder and lightning, and quite a lot of rain.
ReplyDeleteAnother good glimpse of how busy your backgarden is with cats, squirrels and foxes!
We didn't get thunder and lightning here, at least not that I heard!
DeleteBell the Bengal is such a beauty. Squirrels amaze me. And I’d never seen fox activity before your videos. I do enjoy that.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to bring the world of the London fox to your doorstep!
DeleteI cannot understand why you do not use the big compost bin in the corner. Have you got another compost bin somewhere? I doubt that I will be able to get to sleep tonight for pondering upon this matter.
ReplyDeleteThe council collects our food waste and composts it. I don't want to mess with it myself -- the turning, the maintenance, having to exclude certain food waste items, etc.
DeleteAcrobats!! You can understand why people start constructing challenges for squirrels!
ReplyDeleteThey really are astonishingly nimble!
DeleteLots of high wind and rain here too. What a busy stretch of wall. Makes me wonder what is going on in my big garden at night!
ReplyDeleteWendy (Wales)
Lots of things, I bet!
DeleteYour tree rats are very agile!
ReplyDeleteHa! They really are, to my frustration.
DeleteIt's like your own little Squirrel du Soleil out there!
ReplyDeleteHa! I love that.
DeleteYour back yard is a critter highway. I can see how that wall is a very useful path for them. Night in the City.
ReplyDeleteThis is why we don't have hedgehogs, though. They can't navigate that wall!
DeleteThat brick wall is the equivalent of M25 for the animals!
ReplyDeleteExactly! I should put a line down the middle.
DeleteYour squirrels, like mine, are serious gymnasts and they can empty a birdfeeder unlike any bird.
ReplyDeleteWhen I discovered squirrels were chewing the shingles on the edge of my roof, I removed the feeder. A roofer replaced the damaged shingles.
Your garden is a major nighttime freeway of activity. Nice video.
Maximizing sunlight into the house for Winter months makes everything cozy and ideal for houseplants.
Thank goodness that the rain/wind did not damage your avocado tree.
The avocado is pretty flexible, fortunately! I couldn't understand how the birds were emptying our feeders so quickly. HA!
DeleteInteresting watching them leap up that wall. Sometimes it looks like that first leap they don't make it quite to the top as if they are scaling the wall, a little extra boost with the hind legs after the first leap.
ReplyDeleteI finally foiled the squirrels. I put a hood under the bird feeder of the pole which at least one figured out how to maneuver around but what really stopped them was putting the pole through a long section of galvanized downspout which they can't climb.
Codex: when you see it in slow motion cats defying physics with their jump climbing is even more astounding.
DeleteNot my style but I really like how unique the carpet is. There's always carpet tape.
Good idea with the downspout. Now that you mention it, I remember you writing about defying the squirrels. I suppose I need to explore some options -- or just get used to them chowing on the bird food. I suppose there are worse things.
DeleteSteve Reed Road, the animals call it.
ReplyDeleteI love seeing how incredibly nimble the fox is.
Lol. Bell: were heading over to Reed road meet us there.
DeleteI'm surprised the fox can easily go over such a high wall. It does give itself a little push with the hind legs to get to the top, as Ellen pointed out.
DeleteJellicoe sat with me and watched the video with great interest. He seemed particularly taken with the foxes.
ReplyDeleteCat entertainment for hours!
DeleteI too enjoy watching your foxes. I think that if you get a pole mounted feeder and move it away from the trees a bit, it will help with your squirrel problem. https://share.google/BSqmtAuPZEn55xk1q
ReplyDeleteThe problem is, we have so much shrubbery in our garden -- there aren't really many open spaces for a pole-mounted feeder to go!
DeleteAll those animals are so agile. They make jumping that wall look so easy.
ReplyDeleteThe squirrel photos are fantastic. They put on quite the acrobatic show.
They're cute and entertaining and annoying at the same time.
DeleteI will never stop being amazed by the ease and with the grace that cats jump. And, apparently, foxes, too. They are the gymnasts of the animal kingdom, I think (along with chimpanzees, of course, who have the swinging bit in addition to the leaps and jumps!) Good luck with the squirrel. I think I'm trying to force myself that they need food too.
ReplyDeleteThat's what Dave said. The squirrel has to eat!
DeleteThese cameras tell a great story every night.
ReplyDeleteThey really do! I'm always eager to see what we've captured on camera.
DeleteI love that first photo of the squirrel. Amazing how it can hang on like that!
ReplyDeleteYou'd think the blood would rush to its head and it would pass out!
DeleteWe have had so few animals this summer it has not been worth loading the garden cam. Two more gardens have now been paved over.
ReplyDeleteUgh! Paving stones are the enemy! I don't know why anyone would want a concrete garden.
DeleteJohn Green is on a mission to eradicate tuberculosis from the world. I'm glad you're enjoying his book!
ReplyDeleteThat is quite a campaign! But to hear him tell it, there's no reason TB is still such a scourge in some countries, killing thousands of young people.
DeleteOne of my BC group wanted us to read that book but we weren't sure if it would be very good for discussion. My 14 year old cat is a great jumper and often doesn't stage her ascent, just goes for it!
ReplyDeleteI think it would be GREAT for discussion. So many issues -- medical, philanthropic, political, ethical. And it's a relatively easy read. I breezed through it in two days.
DeleteI wonder what John Green’s background with medical subject matter is? It’s the usual terrain of his YA novels, too, right? Or was it only The Fault in Our Stars?
ReplyDeleteCodex: Thank you 37. Not his background and research doesn't replace studying it for a decade.
DeleteHe apparently has some medical and mental health issues (OCD) that have made him highly attuned to medicine and microbes. Not a doctor, but he's quite diligent in his research, from what I can tell -- he visited a TB hospital in Sierra Leone, for example, and that experience figures prominently in the book.
DeleteTrying to keep squirrels out of a bird feeder is really tedious, they are relentless.
ReplyDeleteThey really are! You gotta admire it, in a way!
DeleteCats are amazing jumpers. I enjoyed watching them come and go.
ReplyDeleteI wish we didn't have quite so MANY cats, so OFTEN. But I do enjoy watching them.
DeleteCritter heaven at your place, suet balls and walls to climb, places to run.
ReplyDeleteZootopia!
DeleteThe squirrel looks like it is having fun, when really it is hard work to get some food. The video of what goes on during the dark hours is good.
ReplyDeleteI'm always fascinated to see what's happening out there at 1:30 in the morning!
DeleteWe were sat watching a squirrel while I waited to start the car after a visit to my Mum, I didn't want to start the engine straight away as said squirrel was having a break ... and eating a KitKat.
ReplyDeleteHa! They will eat pretty much ANYTHING they can get their paws on!
Delete