A couple of days ago we heard a few noises on the roof but didn’t think much of it. Yesterday, the following scene transpired:
Spouse sits in den, watches syrupy TV show series on DVD.
(with some alarm) Spouse: Um, there’s a squirrel.
Me: Ok, that would explain the noises we heard.
Spouse: No, I mean: there’s a squirrel. Right here. In the den. With me. And the cats.
Me: Alrighty, then.
I swoop into the den, grab a cat, instruct spouse to grab a cat, and request an immediate exit omnes. A couple of minutes later, I gingerly step into the room and see that there is indeed a very small, very scared looking squirrel curled up in one corner of the room.
First step: find the number and call the animal control officer for the town. Recorded message says “Sorry, we’re not in until tomorrow, try calling either the police or the animal rescue league.”
Squirrel looks like it would be hip to a rescue right about now (from us), so I call the Animal Rescue League. Recorded message says “Sorry, we’re not in until tomorrow, try calling your local police or animal control officer.”
Seems like we have exactly one option, so I call the cops.
Nice lady policeperson: We don’t have animal control on right now, so you might want to try shooing it out.
Me: Um, we’re in a multi-level house and not even on the bottom level. I don’t think we could really shoo it directly out of the house.
Policeperson: Oh. Well, you could try opening a window.
Me: Opening a window, huh? And then try to shoo it out the window? That’s what you’d suggest?
Policeperson: Yes. Call me back and let me know how it goes, Honey.
(yes, she did really call me “Honey.”)
I’m more than a little dubious, but I go over and open the window. It is an awfully long way down. My spouse and I exchange a look along the lines of “making the squirrel jump to its death doesn’t seem very nice, does it?”
More confab, and we decide maybe we could catch it in the cat carrier and take it out of the house. Around now we call a pair of sane friends who think this is a bad idea. One thinks shooing out the window may be possible, but unlikely and the other recommends leaving a little trail of yummies to bait it out the window. (what it does when it gets out there, besides maybe tip the waiter, isn’t specified).
Various objections start to form in my mind to this plan: can’t really think of what to use for bait (we’re not a big peanut butter and cracker family), what if we actually lure other family members into the open window, and then there’s the long-way-down factor to contend with when it actually gets to the window. Back to the drawing board.
Pull our housemates into the scenario. Confab, confab, confab. We decide to call some of the pest control places with pictures of squirrels in their phone book ads. Two places that advertise 24-hour service have answering services and promise to “page their technicians.” (who never called back). I think “I don’t really need a technician. I’m a technician. I need someone to help with squirrels.” Third place actually answers their phone themselves.
Good news: sure, they can come out, and either remove the squirrel or put a trap down and come back later if they can’t catch it then. Bad news: that will be $275. Confab, confab. Housemate suggests buying a trap. Home Despot (sic) has a trap for $40.
Call pest control place back, owner says that having us do the initial trap and having them come out tomorrow to deal with situation more permanently would be fine (though “it is like going to a hardware store and buying some paint and brushes to paint your dining room. Will it look as good as a professional job?”). We decide to chance it. We set up plans for the followup visit for the next day (average cost: $300-$400). Pest control person is nice enough to offer a few tips on the do-it-yourself traps. We also talk a bit about what one can do with a trapped squirrel. Apparently, even without a subway pass, they can return from distances of 30 miles. Still, we express a desire not to have the animal destroyed and they are cool with that. Apparently there is a place (really) that takes animals like this.
Housemate and spouse heads out to Home Despot. While they are out, squirrel shimmies back under the broom closet door in the den from which it came. I quickly jam a yoga pranayama pillow into the door crack (Light on Pest Control) to keep it from coming back into the den.
Back with trap in hand, we spend a few moments deciding whether to use the housemate’s smooth or chunky peanut butters for bait (we choose smooth, for the record). Figure out how to set the trap, leave it in the sealed room and bed down for a nice relaxing night’s sleep. Or rather, attempt at sleep but waking up at every little house noise.
Today the pest control person shows up. Nothing in the trap. We open the broom closet door and surprise!…a small, scared squirrel in the corner of the closet. Pest control person deftly grabs the squirrel using some long-reach pincers and drops him in the trap he brought for the occasion. Squirrel starts screaming its head off. Pest control guy figures out that the squirrel got his foot wedged in gap in the trap and (using gloves) quickly frees it from the jam.
Squirrel stops screaming (phew, because by this time at least one cat is on the phone to her therapist), but proceeds to zoom around the inside of the trap at super-hero speeds for a few seconds. [Note to self: cat carrier idea, not so good.] Ask again about not killing the trapped squirrel and hear the reassuring words “No, this is a baby. They’ll be no killing” as he takes it out to the truck. Happy with the answer, really hope it is true. (exit squirrel).
The rest of the story isn’t nearly as exciting. It just consists of us paying a ton of money to get two one-way doors installed in our gutter area and the entire facia board area sealed with steel mesh. Today’s lesson: squirrels are cute, except when they are in your house. Then, not so much.