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The Zoo That Never Was

von R. D. Lawrence

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Using anecdotes and personal obsevances, the author describes the habits of the variety of wild animals taken in and cared for by him and his wife on their farm in Ontario.
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The author lived with his wife on 350 acres of forest in Ontario, Canada. He studied the local wildlife and was willing to take in animals that needed care (there was no wildlife rehabilitation center around in those days) so before long people in the area knew to bring him any injured or orphaned creatures they found. The largest character throughout the book is a black bear named Snuffles, that they took in as an orphan when it was the size of a cat, which eventually grew to be several hundred pounds standing taller than seven feet when upright! Snuffles makes repeat appearances through the narrative, gentle and mild-tempered unless denied food he wanted- then he’d fly into a rage and become destructive. The couple had to bar him from the house as he got larger, coax him to den up by himself for winter sleep, and were glad when he eventually made his own way in the wild. The bear was close companions with their malamute dog when it was a puppy- but as the two got older their wrestling bouts turned into serious confrontations and eventually the dog saw the bear as a rival and enemy. Which caused them a lot of trouble until the bear finally went off into the woods.

Among the many other animals they tended to and raised were a skunk, woodchuck, raccoons, porcupine, several squirrels, a lynx, moose, pair of river otters and one small but very lively weasel. They nursed back to health injured geese, ducks, rabbits, owls and a hawk. The wildlife on their land came to recognize the couple would not harm them, and they had flocks of chickadees and blue jays demanding food on a regular basis, a chipmunk that would feed from their hands, flying squirrels and deer that would come to the yard also for food. Such a wide range of animals, all treated with compassion and respect- but also a heavy dose of caution especially the bear and lynx. The stories about their interactions are amusing and full of interesting details, and there’s close observations on all of them. In many cases the author was particularly interested in answering questions he had about the animals’ habits. One that struck me was his idea that raccoons don’t really “wash” their food- he suggests that the behavior is caused by the stress and boredom of being shut up in captivity (hence often seen by people) and that raccoons in the wild never repetitively handle their food in water. I’d be interested to know if anyone else has made this conclusion.

from the Dogear Diary ( )
  jeane | Mar 1, 2021 |
I generally love R. D. Lawrence’s books. This one is about various animals he rescued in the course of several years and then returned back to the wilderness once they could fend for themselves – thus the title. Some of them returned to visit occasionally, on a poor hunting day, in which case he “invited them to dinner.” Interestingly, he observes that sometimes the greatest challenge was presented not by a bear or a lynx, but by something small, common and defenseless. Once, for example, he saved a robin chick from a snake and then was faced with the task of finding food for it, crawling around his farm with a jar looking for ants, beetles and caterpillars. It’s a great book about animals and wilderness. ( )
  Ella_Jill | Feb 28, 2009 |
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Using anecdotes and personal obsevances, the author describes the habits of the variety of wild animals taken in and cared for by him and his wife on their farm in Ontario.

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