Sometimes you’ve got to wonder: What’s in that hole?

The sandy banks of the wash are liberally punctured with dens of rats and ground squirrels and such: I don’t hurt them because they can’t hurt me.

But what the hell lives in that one?

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We encountered it in a seldom-visited tributary to the wash, quite a good distance from the Lair. Ghost could fit in it handily. If it’s a coyote den, it’s the first I’ve ever found. I’d say badger but it’s too big.

About Joel

You shouldn't ask these questions of a paranoid recluse, you know.
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16 Responses to Sometimes you’ve got to wonder: What’s in that hole?

  1. MamaLiberty says:

    Hard to say. Pure sand won’t support a large hole, of course, so the roots of the scrub bush above it are probably the only thing keeping it from collapse. Might just be a sink hole from the most recent rains, the sand washing out from under the plant somehow. Might watch it from time to time and see if the plant dies.

  2. Unclezip says:

    Looks like a badger den.

  3. Joel says:

    “Might just be a sink hole from the most recent rains”

    No, it was freshly dug out, and this was before the rain. Sand was too soft to hold any tracks other than depressions.

    Which makes me think maybe I should go back and look while the sand is firm from the rain.

  4. Matt says:

    Honey Badger. Possibly a gnome.

  5. Buck. says:

    Bilbo Baggins.

  6. Hard to tell the size without something in the shot for scale – but the badger that comes around here every couple of months makes holes that look like that which are around 10-12″ in diameter. Sometimes they dig for a meal (must be a helluva way to wake up – having a badger come through the ceiling…) and sometimes it’ll be for a den. I’ve read that in some cases the dens can go back as much as 20′.

    Just wondering… how much footing do you have around your chicken pen?

  7. Joel says:

    Just wondering… how much footing do you have around your chicken pen?

    The Fortress of Attitude has concrete blocks half-trenched into the ground all around. A really determined badger could dig through. On Landlady’s Big Chickenhouse, she dug a trench under the fenceline, walls and doorway and filled it with cement. I found marks where it’s been tried, but the concrete always stops them.

  8. Jay says:

    Recently hatched Shai-hulud (aka sandworm).
    Keep a look-out for melange…

  9. jabrwok says:

    Nah, that looks like a “dry, bare, sandy hole with nothing in it to sit down on or to eat”. No “perfectly round door, painted green, with a shiny yellow brass knob in the exact middle”, so definitely not Bilbo.

  10. jon spencer says:

    One of those radioactive spiders.

  11. Biba says:

    Graboids

  12. Buck. says:

    “Nah, that looks like a “dry, bare, sandy hole with nothing in it to sit down on or to eat”. No “perfectly round door, painted green, with a shiny yellow brass knob in the exact middle”, so definitely not Bilbo.”

    So you think those cozy, well decorated, mahogany paneled and homey abodes just happen….as if a wizard came along and waved his wand? Hrmmph……

  13. jabrwok says:

    I’m tempted to start discussing the construction history of Bag End, but I’m not sure Uncle Joel wants to be inundated with that level of geek:-).

  14. TM says:

    It’s dark. Therefore, you are likely to be eaten by a grue.

  15. abnormalist says:

    without scale, its hard to tell, but if it were around here I would suspect woodchuck.

    A pile of fresh sand in front is the woodchuck equivalent of a septic system

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