The house we are renting has large
windows, and the windows want washing, inside and out. First I wasted a whole bottle of Windex and a
whole roll of paper towels, having poked around in the closets looking for a
proper squeegee, and finding none. The
dogs watched me going at the windows the whole time. I thought I was being
interesting. It was the deer in the yard, though, that was the interesting part,
and as I came in, out went Captain for a long, deer-chasing romp.
Later, I made for the closest hardware
store I know of, in the near-ish town of Cross River. The hardware store makes
keys, sells paint, and has the parts of your running toilet that will make it
stop running. Like so many of the small hardware stores you find in
strip-malls, it’s packed to the rafters with merchandise. I always find that
you walk in and ask the guy behind the counter. Don’t bother looking for
yourself. I was shown a few options, and picked a squeegee for which one must
provide a handle. The clerk found a couple of possibilities for the pole, none
of them perfect, but he did secure the pole to the squeegee with a screw,
charging me for neither the pole nor the screw. Along the way, I got a bit of history
(the upstairs of the store used to be the screening room of the old movie
theater), and some predictions for snow this winter.
In Westchester County, deer (and black
bear) can be hunted only by bow, and the season is from October 15th
to December 31st. I have already met one man who has permission to hunt
on this land. The deer here are
certainly plentiful, and a danger to motorists. I see them every morning when I
walk the dogs to get the paper, all day when I look out the windows, every
afternoon when I walk the dogs on the road, and every day when I am out driving. There was a large doe killed recently on Cat
Ridge Road, where I walk. One of its
hind legs was broken in the accident, and stuck out from its body at a disturbing
angle. It happened on Friday night, and the carcass had been removed by Monday
midday. Scavengers had only just started to make progress on it.
The deer here in Westchester seem well
adapted to seeing people and cars and trucks, and give everything a good, long,
dumb stare before walking or running away.
There is a group that I have seen grazing dully at the margins of the
Taconic Thruway near Lagrangeville. The speed limit is 50 mph, but many people seem
to take that as a polite suggestion, like flossing daily or changing your
smoke-detector batteries twice a year. The one thing that seems to make deer
try to leap high and run fast is my knuckleheaded dogs; they charge at deer, barking
furiously in frustration, running as fast as they can with no plan for maneuvering
over the stone walls that the deer hop over without much visible effort. Maybe if deer made more noise I would respect
them more.
My landlord informs me that he likes
seeing the crows and ravens and vultures and eagles that come if the bow
hunters leave the entrails after gutting a deer. As a dog owner, the possibility of my dogs
getting into rotting deer entrails is pretty scary, but it is not nearly as
scary as the prospect of preventing any and all Vizsla escapes from October 15th
to December 31st, from dawn to dusk.
I am pretty sure that Vizslas look as much like white-tail deer as any
dog can.
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