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By Julie Zickefoose
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To Touch a Baby Bobcat

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I have so many fond memories of my dad, and one of my favorites is his saying, out of nowhere, 
“I’ve always thought a bobcat would make a nice pet. Get him young, tame him down, that’d be a real nice pet.”
He’d usually go on, “I don’t have much use for housecats, but a bobcat seems like a real nice animal.”
Well. 
As to the “getting him young” part, this’n my friends, who know cats very well, figured at about five weeks old, straight from the woods to their drainpipe. He had all his teeth.
He was rawther well armed. 

In nail and in tooth. That little sucker was absolutely gnawing on the gauntlets. Young as he was, he knew he was wild, and did not appreciate being handled for the transfer from bed to feeding carrier.

My friend gently installed him in the feeding carrier and I offered fresh minced raw chicken breast, which I thought would be better for him than cat food. The wildlife rehabilitator I had spoken to had recommended stew beef, but I didn’t have any on hand. The chicken had been bought that day, and I rinsed it too, knowing that chicken can carry a good bacterial load.

The bobkitten heartily approved of the diet change. My friends chuckled at his avid acceptance of the birdy offering. “He likes your cooking better!”

The first thing Eric Bear, our Washington County Wildlife Officer, asked when I phoned was, “Are you sure it’s a bobcat? Does it have the white spots on back of its ears?”  (He don’t know me vewwy well, do he?)

White spots: Check. Leetle bitty tufts, too.
Officer Bear wanted me, as a Category II wildlife rehabilitator, to take the kitten so all would be legal until he could get in touch with ODNR in Columbus, which would match the kitten with someone who knew how to care for bobcats, and had the facilities to return them to the wild.
Oh, well, if I must…He’d spend Sunday night in my care, and with luck we’d have a rehabilitator lined up sometime Monday morning.
Category II means I’ve had my rabies shots and taken a course on handling rabies vector species, so theoretically I’m equipped to do this. Totally feeling my way. Who gets a baby bobcat, after all?
As long as we had to handle him, we decided to see to some of the hideous burrs matting his fur. We wondered how long he’d been without the care of his mother. I could feel every bone, every bump of his little spine. Looked like a male, which is hard to tell from this blurry shot, but please note teeny tiny stump tail and giant hindclaws. 
My friend held him firmly and I went to work on the burrs, picking them out of his fur as quickly as I could. My fingers moved up and down his tiny body, and as I worked him over, I felt him relax and go still. Twice, I heard a rumble that was not a growl. Like the chicken dinner, this made sense to him. I envisioned his lost mama holding him down, pulling out burrs with her teeth, and I imagined he did too.
He was purring.
I was so disarmed by that, by feeling him respond to kindness and what felt familiar to him. No matter how wild, all young things need to know they’re loved.
All right, DOD. You may have a point. Every cell in my body was wanting to hold him up under my chin and rock him to sleep. But wild things must stay wild, and this dear little creature would be no exception. Later that night I’d creep up and peek through the vents in the carrier to see him stretched out luxuriously on his side, belly round, one arm flung out, cuddled into his pile of soft towels. It was a sight to do my heart good. 
Next: Wild thing, wild food!

Julie Zickefoose is a painter and writer who lives on a nature sanctuary in Appalachian Ohio. She is the author of Letters from Eden and The Bluebird Effect: Uncommon Bonds With Common Birds, due in spring 2012. http://juliezickefoose.blogspot.com


Source: http://juliezickefoose.blogspot.com/2015/06/to-touch-baby-bobcat.html


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