rivka: (her majesty)
[personal profile] rivka
Okay, that was weird.

A moment ago, I glanced out my kitchen door into our courtyard. My eye caught a movement that I processed as "squirrel" - but a second glance corrected that. No, no, it was definitely a rat. A big fat one, resembling nothing more than a shaved-tailed squirrel. It was hunched over in the middle of the courtyard, licking its little paws.

I opened the kitchen door and stepped onto the tiny porch. The rat backed up halfway into a hole in the fence and sat there, watching me. It wasn't until I walked all the way down into the main part of the courtyard that it disappeared entirely through the hole.

I've always known that I could expect to encounter rats in the city. Baltimore has a notorious rat population. Rats are the reason why we're blessed with free garbage pickup twice weekly - it's certainly not because the city is concerned with our comfort and convenience - and why we put our garbage out in a stout plastic barrel with a tight-fitting cover instead of in plastic bags on the street. I didn't expect to see rats in the house - mice, maybe, but rats are something I only associate with the worst slums - but I certainly expected to see them in the street.

I expected my first urban rat encounter to be scary and disgusting. I didn't expect the rat to look... well, like a wild animal. Like a ground squirrel or a woodchuck or any of the other rodents I've encountered in natural settings. I felt about the same way I would if I saw a raccoon in my yard - cautious, because they carry diseases, and wary, because they can be an annoyance. But not horrified. Not squicked. That feels weird.

(My apologies to [livejournal.com profile] womzilla, [livejournal.com profile] supergee, and [livejournal.com profile] nellorat for any implied slighting of your rat friends. None was intended.)

Date: 2003-06-30 04:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ewtikins.livejournal.com
Ditto for living in London. We had a rat living in our garden for a little while (Somebody, I'm not sure who, didn't rinse the tuna tins out properly and then put them outside 'until the recycling guys come' and left them there for a month. Not bright.) and it made me uneasy... but not disgusted. I knew it couldn't get into the house, save through a wide-open door. I wanted to do something about it because unforunately one rat very often means in a little while there will be many rats - I'm not sure how long the gestation period is for rats but it isn't terribly long. I hummed and hawed - I did not want to kill it, and I didn't know how to scare it away.

In the end, a few weeks ago there was a rat hit by a car down the road, and I suspect it was 'our' rat, because I have not heard any vague rustlings from the bushes since, and the garden has been pretty thoroughly de-weeded.

I feel kindof sorry for it, to be honest, but at the same time relieved because it is one less problem for me to deal with.

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