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Peterson: Critters first seems to be cardinal rule at feeders

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All I want to see, really, are cardinals feasting at our birdfeeders.

For a while there, cardinals were feasting. A male and a female, mates, no doubt. And that made me happy.

But they haven’t been around for months.

I like to watch birds, but I’m not a bird-watcher. I don’t own a set of binoculars. I don’t have the time. And I don’t want to be snooping around in the woods for hours, squinting through binoculars to catch a glimpse of a bird, check the field guide, then guess what it might be and probably be wrong.

I want them to come to me, so I can look out the kitchen window and see who might be visiting today. I like yellow wrens and woodpeckers, but that’s hardly specific enough for bird-watchers. Lots of wrens are yellow. Just where were they yellow? And did they come in other shades? What about the beak?

Instead, what we get are mammals. Squirrels and chipmunks. Fat ones.

I used to be fond of chipmunks, the first wildlife that I remember seeing up close. I’m not counting squirrels, rabbits, raccoons, opossums, skunks, rats or birds in general. Those are suburban animals, kind of like animals you would find in an urban zoo with no fences. Not worth fencing in.

But the chipmunks were cute, the kind of animal you’d want for a pet. But you’d settle for a hamster because chipmunks were wild and not to be trusted or kept as a pet, there being a law against that. The chipmunks would scurry about, tails up, looking for food or trying to make a getaway from who knows what. They were fun to watch.

Until many years later when they found out we had food for them. All the food that was meant for birds.

Chipmunks can climb straight up poles, jump from bushes to baffles to bird feeders in a single bound. And they can spend a long time on a feeder, eating what they can, spreading the rest on the ground.

They came after the squirrels, who can climb up and over and around just about anything designed to stop them. And the squirrels love our bird feeders just as much as the chipmunks. Both have voracious appetites. But the food is not meant for them.

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