Between the Landlords and
the Gophers
Recently,
the conflict between nature and civilization placed me in the middle of a
dispute between my landlords and an unknown quantity of gophers. The gophers
were digging tunnels and throwing large mounds of dirt and rock up onto the
grass. This is apparently what gophers do. I felt intimidated by the ability of
such small animals to move so much earth so quickly. The condition of the yard
was also deteriorating because the landlords have their own substandard
gardener whose method of dealing with the gophers was to throw more sand and
rock on top of their holes. The gophers simply made fresh holes elsewhere in
the yard. The landlords wanted the gophers gone and left me a pitiful but
torturous trap to use. I shuddered and hoped I never had to spring such a
medieval device on a living creature.
At the
time we moved in to the house the
gophers were only digging in the back yard. When the landlords cut down two of
the three trees in the back, it seemed to scare the gophers away for a couple
of weeks. When they returned, it was in the front yard. The gophers were making
bigger mounds more quickly, as if exacting revenge for the day the earth above
them shook with the violence of chainsaw and woodchipper. In their fresh new
front yard digs the gophers chewed up the lawn and the flower beds from
underneath. They were making use of the tunnels along which ran the sprinkler
lines, so they didn’t need to dig more. They were just pissed. By this time so was
I. The predator pee was too expensive and “iffy.” So, I tried drowning them
out, hoping they would hate it and move to another yard or back into the field
behind the house. I would find the freshest mound and dig until I found a hole.
I put the hose right into the hole and turned on the water. The first time I
tried it water shot out of another hole about 3 yards away. The next morning I
went out and found newly built mounds of freshly dug earth. The gophers just
moved over and made new little dirt volcanoes erupting out of the calm grass.
My friend Jake, a former student from Georgia who was visiting looked at the
yard and said, “I’ve never seen anything like this.” It looked like a miniature
of a trampled on mine-field.
Finally, after saturating the ground and running up the water bill, I
gave up and went to the hardware store to see if I could find a humane
solution. Poison and kill-traps were all they had. I bought what seemed like a
strong, quick-killing trap and as the cashier rang it up she said, “A lot of
people have been buying these lately.” I felt a little better about what I had
to do thinking that there must be a local gopher epidemic. I still hesitated
for days, hoping that if I stopped chasing them they would stop chewing up the
yard. Finally, I had to dig between two recently made holes and plant the trap
in the tunnel. This trap was concealed under a molded black plastic hood, which
kept the light and dirt off the catch and made it appear to be part of the dark
tunnel. The instructions said that if you hadn’t caught one in three days
you should move the trap. Instead I waited three days to dig it up. There was a
gopher, smaller than I remembered them being, dead in the trap. I felt
terrible. I wished that I hadn't done this, and hoped this was the only gopher.
Unfortunately,
the largest mound so far was built-up on a new hole the next morning. I
hesitated for a couple of days, and then planted the trap again. This time I
couldn’t make myself dig it up for almost a week. When my wife threatened to do
it, I went out immediately and "took care of it." This gopher was
bigger than the first one. Luckily, there have been no new holes since
then, and the yard and flower beds are looking green again, if still
pock-marked and uneven. I don’t know what to do with my feelings of guilt
about killing an innocent but destructive creature. I am confused because I
feel a kinship with all life and yet I know that territorial matters in nature
are often matters of life and death. I am becoming a more conscientious
omnivore. I did not kill these gophers for food directly, but the landlords
threatened us with damages if we didn’t “USE THE TRAP! NOTHING ELSE WILL WORK.
WE’VE TRIED!” We need money for food, unlike gophers.
I
really am sorry, gophers. In the human world people “own” land, as strange as
that must seem to you who work it. This isn't my land either.
1 comment:
Gophers are extremely destructive & hard to get eliminate. You took care of the situation in the only plausible way. Congratulations!!!
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