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The mother of "What critter did you find in the barn?"

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  • Just the other evening I went out to bring the horses in, and found a whole family of skunks crossing the driveway right in front of the paddock where the horses were. Cutest dang things I have ever seen - a mama and 8 or 9 babies. There were so many I lost count, they kept jumping over each other and somersaulting.

    Then of course the horses come racing up to the fence to investigate. Baby skunks attempt to make friends. Horses fascinated, try to touch noses with babies. Mama skunk visibly sighs impatiently and says something in skunk-ish that I imagine is "Let's GO, children, I do not have time for this." And they all toddle off into the woods next door.
    where are we going, and why am I in this hand basket?

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    • I was walking out to the barn and a small long animal comes running out of the open door. I'm thinking heck no one raises mink anymore. Then it sits up real cute and begs for some attention - it was a ferret. A very lonely ferret.

      We put notices up and did a found ad, called animal control. No one ever claimed it. I had to find it a home, awfully cute and loved to cuddle, but too much work to keep and our house has way too many places to run and hide.

      We've had the 'naked' coyotes with mange - creepiest thing to see slinking across the field. We actually had town people company at the time and the guy spotted the 'thing' in the field and said what the hell is that? Had to take them out, can't have the sick ones.
      The cue card kid just held up an empty cue card. For a minute there I thought I had lost my sense of humor. --- Red Skelton

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      • Our barn looks like raccoon grand central station each evening. This is what happens when you have a "wildlife rehabber" (translation: whackjob, coon-feeding, animal rights activist) living almost directly behind you. We always have deer around. I've enjoyed watching a set of twins romp around my pasture all summer. There's at least one fox in the area. I've caught sight of it only once, though it has stopped by for chicken dinner a few times now.

        The only creepy critters we've had are black widow spiders and snakes. We have years where there are almost no widows and years like this year where they're everywhere. This year was the first time I ever found any inside my barn, and I've fly-sprayed dozens to their doom. Big ones! I'm not sure why they've decided to move indoors. Even my exterminator says that's unusual and swears up and down they're too territorial to share space... but they have this year. They aren't nearly as startling as the 6-ft+ rat snake that snuck in when DSD was out feeding one night. I thought she'd gotten kicked or something by the way she screamed, all over one harmless (albeit large) reptile. I guess the snake had a sense of humor because it only slithered out of its hiding places when DSD was in the barn. Pretty thing. It hung around for about 2 days before getting out in the open enough for DH to attempt to corral it. He didn't manage to catch it, and as far as I know, Mr. (Mrs.?) Snake is haunting someone else's barn in the area.
        "I did know once, only I've sort of forgotten." - Winnie the Pooh

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        • Well this thread gave me nightmares! I live in South Texas and I've been jumpy about going in the tack room since reading the OP(tarantulas are my biggest fear). Last night I stood outside the door, checking first, all good, spider free, and when I walked in something dropped on my head and scurried down my back! Thank god I was alone and nobody saw the total meltdown I had lol. Luckily it turned out to be a little lizard. Phew!

          At my other barn here I found a huge yellow scorpion in a bucket of stuff(after I'd reached in and was digging in it) and a babt rat snake in my saddle bags. I used to run out to feed in my flip flops and once while mixing grain, a several feet long snake slithered up through a hole in the floor and calmly passed through, just a couple feet from my bare toes. Luckily it was only a rat snake but I started wearing boots after that!

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          • I feel bad for giving so many of you nightmares with the tarantula story, sorry!

            So I have found nice things in the barn. One chilly October morning, I went to get hay for the horses and something unfolded itself from the hay pile and stared at me. That was my greyhound Babe. We never discovered where she came from, but she lived with me for four years before crossing the bridge.

            Two years before that (almost exactly) I went into the barn to feed and something tiny hurtled itself around the far end of the barn, down the aisle, and scrambled behind my legs -- a gray kitten. While I processed the big greenish-blue eyes staring at me, movement from the other end of the barn caught my attention and I turned to see a skunk barreling towards us. Grabbed the kitten and ran for the house!

            And then last spring, I went to feed and heard meowing from the hay stack. I peered inside a hole and saw huge green eyes staring back at me from a tabby face. And then the kitten launched itself at my head, wrapped its paws around my neck, and started giving me kisses. So now both kittens are adults and living in the house.

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            • We have a resident bobcat that, in the winters, at dawn, before daylight starts, sits like a tall egyptian statue between the house and barn and watched my little dog and myself walk over to feed the horses.

              I am not sure she is not eyeballing the little dog as a handy breakfast.

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              • .....A mama bear and her half grown cub playing teeter-totter on our garbage trailer. Where I grew up as a kid, we didn't have municipal trash collection, we had to lock our trash up, and twice a week make a trip to the local land fill. My dad had an old tent trailer box that he used to haul it in, and when not in use, it just sat near the barn, tongue down. Woke up one night with the dogs growling and carrying on, and this odd sound of "shuffle, shuffle, shuffle, BANG!" Dad and I went outside to investigate and there were the two bears calmly walking back and forth from one end of the trailer to the other, going up and down like a teeter-totter! We watched them for about 10 minutes until the mama bear decided play time was over and they quietly wandered off into the woods.

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