Here's something else that's both odd and real: the raccoon. In the glorious Canadian cartoon of the same name, raccoons rode bicycles, wore monogrammed sweatshirts and even owned dogs. They had pleasant picnics in the woods and only occasionally fell out with their neighbour Cyril Sneer (who was an aardvark, according to google - not a shaved bear, as I had suspected). Until last week, I had never had reason to stop and think about real raccoons; not in any meaningful sense. "Oh, that bin has been tipped over," Heather would say. "Must be the raccoons." Cue my daydreaming of Bert, Ralph and Melissa playing tennis or scrumping apples or something.
L-R: Scarf, ganzie, crop top |
POO. In fact, TWO POOS. Big ones. Comfortably bigger than a cat's. A frown creeps across my befuddled face. "Heather," I manage to emit, "one of our neighbours has been throwing dog shit up here." Tony says little, but I can tell that she immediately suspects the two dog-owning smokers across the way. Their house is up for sale and she's already decided what she thinks of it: not as nice as ours. Which makes them bad people.
Before we can speculate any further ("Turkey vultures?") there is a rustling; a growing sense of dread; a noise from a corner that ought to be silent. The barbecue is alive, breathing, sneaking.
We stand still and slowly turn our heads in the direction of the disturbance. A bandit's face slowly, very slowly, emerges from the canvas barbecue cover. I do what real men do: hazard a wild guess as to what it is and what it wants. "Heather... IT'S A FOX!" I cry, momentarily forgetting that foxes are physically unable to scale the sides of buildings and drop onto balconies. The face's creepy, sinewy, human-like hands slide into view and the game is up: it's a raccoon, and we're facing certain death.
Our stares meet - its evil shrimp eyes and my nice blue ones - and its expression speaks a thousands words, a thousand sentiments, but mostly this: "I shat on your balcony and slept in your barbecue. And now I'm leaving." With that, the Bastard of the Woods (TM David Welsh) slunk over the neighbour's wall, presumably to curl out a Cleveland Steamer on her spotless Muskoka chairs.
Dirty Bertie |
That absolute BASTARD had better watch himself when our gas bill arrives.