Small Cabin

Small Cabin Forum
 - Forums - Register/Sign Up - Reply - Search - Statistics -

Small Cabin Forum / Nature / Help me identify this wild beast
Author Message
justins7
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 10:26
Reply 


I can't identify this animal that's been seen lurking around my porch. I know we have skunks, groundhogs and raccoons. But this chubby guy doesn't seem to be one of those. Badger? Porcupine? Dinosaur?

Badger seems most likely, but the snout looks so different.

I'm in upstate NY.
beast
beast


justins7
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 10:29
Reply 


I'm trying to upload a video but it didn't work. Here's another screen shot.
Screen_Shot_202006.png
Screen_Shot_202006.png


Brettny
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 10:31
Reply 


Looks almost like a raccoon to me. The night shot is prob making it so hard to Id.

justins7
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 10:45
Reply 


The tail is so small though and it doesn't have the raccoon "mask" around the eyes. And the ears are small too.

I wish I could post the video, because you can see that its gate is strange — it waddles from side to side.
Screen_Shot_202006.png
Screen_Shot_202006.png


paulz
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 10:57
Reply 


Beats me but I wish my hair looked that neat!

Nate R
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 11:09
Reply 


Looks like a porcupine to me.

paulz
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 11:24
Reply 


I got a similar thing coming around too.
gg.PNG
gg.PNG


KelVarnsen
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 11:42
Reply 


Quoting: Nate R
Looks like a porcupine to me.


I agree, it has to be a porcupine, but it does look pretty different.

Brettny
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 15:26
Reply 


I thought porcupine too. But by the looks of the pic it has for not quills

SCSJeff
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 15:39
Reply 


I'm thinking badger too. Just googled some pictures and some look to have the same coloring on the top of the head

justins7
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 16:58
Reply 


It's strange, though. This beast still doesn't quite look exactly like either a porcupine or a badger. The snout and tail are different. hmmmmm...

hattie
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 17:21 - Edited by: hattie
Reply 


Maybe it is a female, adult badger? It actually looks a lot like a honey badger but they are native of Africa and Asia.

Those claws on it are definitely used for digging.
Adult Female Badger
Adult Female Badger
Honey Badger
Honey Badger


FishHog
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 17:35
Reply 


Porky, you can see the white of the quills in the second picture.

NorthRick
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 19:11 - Edited by: NorthRick
Reply 


It does not look like the porcupines I see here in Alaska. The quills aren't long enough, especially on the head.

However, it does look like the one in the photo on this website:

https://www.adirondackalmanack.com/2020/02/the-strange-lives-of-porcupines.html

Which would be in your neck of the woods. Have any chew marks in any plywood? They can be real destructive up here that way. Apparently they like the glue.

jaransont3
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 19:21 - Edited by: jaransont3
Reply 


Has to be a juvenile porcupine. Sure looks like it in the second picture you posted. This is from a Michigan trailcam that shows two juvenile porcupines.



The one on the left is a dead ringer for the pictures you posted.

spoofer
Member
# Posted: 3 Jun 2020 21:41
Reply 


there are many fishers around NY these days too.

naturelover66
Member
# Posted: 4 Jun 2020 06:32
Reply 


Its a porcupine 😁

justins7
Member
# Posted: 4 Jun 2020 09:22
Reply 


It does look just like those two young lovers in the pic posted by jaransont3.

Thanks for the responses. This would be fun, if it wasn't always a challenge controlling these critters. (Every day my wife and I battle mice, chipmunks, etc.)

Brettny
Member
# Posted: 4 Jun 2020 12:06
Reply 


Porcupines can be pretty destructive and I hope you dont have dogs.


How are you controlling the mice?

justins7
Member
# Posted: 4 Jun 2020 16:43
Reply 


No dogs yet, though the wife wants to get one.

We've been controlling the mice with snap traps. I have heavy-duty ones that can be reused. Sealing up every hole is nearly impossible since my cabin is pretty rickety. At this point the traps seem to at least moderately control them. They are hard to beat though. I even see them outside, little grey fur balls in the grass.

I used to use poison but have stopped, since I don't want to wind up poisoning birds.

Brettny
Member
# Posted: 5 Jun 2020 08:08
Reply 


You will never win with snap traps. If the traps are in your cabin your just baiting them in. If your not there every weekend you will never catch enough. If you dont want poison have you tried the bucket trap in a shed or out building?

Our shed was less than 1 month old before they had alreaty started making nests above the walls. I'm not there enough for snap traps. I poison in spring and fall. Not a sign of them in quite a few months. I do still see them in the woods so I'm hardly destroying the population.

Just
Member
# Posted: 5 Jun 2020 09:39
Reply 


They love OSB it’s the glue . Eat you out of house and home .

FishHog
Member
# Posted: 5 Jun 2020 12:00
Reply 


Quoting: Just
They love OSB it’s the glue . Eat you out of house and home


this is true, but I truly hate OSB and don't believe it should be used as a building material anyway. I tore all kinds of it out of our cabin when we bought it and gutted the place. Would have been easier if the porkys' had found it first.

Your reply
Bold Style  Italic Style  Underlined Style  Thumbnail Image Link  Large Image Link  URL Link           :) ;) :-( :confused: More smilies...

» Username  » Password 
Only registered users can post here. Please enter your login/password details before posting a message, or register here first.