Sunday, February 26, 2017

Blog Post 4

In this unusually warm February week, I found myself sitting outside Googling “How much do squirrels weigh?” on my laptop. I typically try to spend time alone outside, with no technology. I would prefer to live in the moment and write later, after I’ve had some time. The squirrel in my backyard made this impossible for me.

I’ve noticed an increase in animals running through my yard with the temperature rising. They run along the side, as if looking for the garden that has not yet been planted for the year. Squirrels race along the top of the wooden fence, climbing up and down trees along the way. Their balance amazes me. The way they can speed across a surface that is only an inch, maybe an inch and a half, wide.

City squirrels tend to look heavier set than the ones you may see in less populated areas. They don’t just rely on nature for meals around here. I’ve seen them leaping out of garbage cans, grabbing French fries from the sidewalk, stealing berries from my garden, hanging from bird feeders. There seems to be endless options for them here, however good they are for their health.

This particular squirrel looked medium sized. He wasn’t as fit as he probably should be, but definitely hadn’t caught on to the other’s bad habit of eating humans’ left over fast food. His speed wasn’t what caught my interest. He was balancing on a branch on my tree. My tree, with its thin, bare branches. The tree that grew from just a stump. The same tree that made me question how it was able to bear leaves in the spring. I couldn’t believe that it could hold anything, let alone this semi-chubby squirrel.

I searched online as I watched him perched on a small branch, surveying his surroundings. The Eastern Gray Squirrel will weigh anywhere from 0.88 to 1.3 pounds as an adult. Even with their speed and size, I can’t imagine holding one and feeling practically no weight. I’m guessing my squirrel weighs a little more than the average amount. He can’t weigh that much more though.

Once more, I took to the internet and searched “What objects weigh 1 pound?” A can of beans, 4 sticks of butter, a single baseball, a football, 3 medium-sized bananas, half a rack of ribs, 8 Krispy Kreme glazed donuts. The list was never ending. I tried to imagine holding the squirrel in one hand and a box of Krispy Kreme donuts in the other. Both were supposed to be similar weight.


I no longer know what I am amazed by. The tree that I couldn’t believe was capable of holding up to the weight of its own leaves is actually capable of holding the weight of a living being. This grown squirrel with its rounded stomach and bushy tail weighs about the same as the box of butter I bought to bake cookies this weekend. Even more, I could hang that box of butter from a branch on my tree and it wouldn’t break.

4 comments:

  1. You grabbed my attention with your first line, and I found myself realizing I had no idea how much an average squirrel weighs. So thanks for that knowledge!

    With this week's topic in class being about urban nature, I think squirrels are a great creature to focus on. They're a constant in a lot of urban spaces, so much that we tend to overlook them. I like your line "I no longer know what I am amazed by"—your entry brought the presence of urban squirrels back into the spotlight of amazement for me. :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Becca- I like the way you invited us into your research with an opening question about squirrels' weight. I think it's important that nature writers retain a sense of wonder and humility about the natural world. Including readers in this process creates an early investment in your piece. Your comparison of squirrels to everyday objects that weigh about a pound added humor too! You helped me easily visualize this information. This is a terrific entry during our current study of urban nature writing!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I love the parallel you completed here between the natural world and our human, technology-based world. You started this in your first paragraph, how you prefer not use technology to taint your experience when you are outside. But you did anyway, to help you connect and visualize nature (the squirrel) better. Then, you did it again near the end. To see what other things, what other human things, weight 1 pound. It was a brilliant circle effect you did there. Beautiful job, Becca.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I love how you've merged your entry this week with the larger ideas we've been considering in class about the definitions of urban nature; this post fits in with those discussions perfectly. I also really appreciate how the research is woven throughout the reflection, so that it feels like a natural extension of your curiosity. And, I love the subtly humorous tone. All of these complement each other in surprising ways.

    ReplyDelete