The voles have invaded Desiree's flower garden again.
Though
they are often mistaken for mice, they live very different lives. While mice
are quick to invade and take advantage of the luxuries of our homes, voles are
creatures of meadows, fields, and forest edges. They spend most of their time
hidden beneath dense grasses, scuttling through narrow runways they weave
through the vegetation and retreating to shallow burrows where they nest and
store food. Their diet consists mainly of grasses, roots, seeds, bulbs, and the
bark of young trees, which can make them unwelcome visitors in gardens and
orchards. Although a vole may occasionally wander into a garage or shed by
accident, they rarely take up residence inside houses.
If
you spot a small rodent scampering across your kitchen floor, it's almost
certainly a mouse rather than a vole. A vole is easy to recognize by its
compact body, blunt nose, tiny ears that nearly disappear into its fur, and its
short tail, which is only about a third the length of its body.
Yesterday,
I live-trapped two voles from the garden and carted them down the road for
release in the place we nicknamed Voleville in honor of previous releases
there. I'm sharing two photographs of one of the captured voles. The second
includes a Cold Smoke beer for an accurate reference of its size.
—Mitchell
Hegman









