Overcast
49°
St. Charles, IL
Overcast|Forecast »

Otto: Out on a walk, a real gem discovered

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
Pam Otto came across this fragment from The De Kalb Daily Chronicle, published in 1923, while on a walk on Route 38, near Pouley Road. (Photo provided)

One of my very favorite things about taking a walk outside is that you never know what you might find. Even when you set out with a single purpose in mind, your trek may yield discoveries you never dreamed possible.

Take the walk I went on a few weeks ago with my coworker Lisa O’Brien. Heading to western Kane County, Lisa (the same person who spotted the tagged red-tailed hawk we wrote about a few weeks ago) had noticed an odd series of burrows along the north side of Route 38 near Pouley Road. A frequent traveler out that way, she said it appeared that the burrows were increasing in number. We both wondered whether this activity indicated that a badger was in the vicinity and, given the sunny and 50-degree weather that day, decided to go check it out.

Now, I’ll tell you up front that we never did decide whose work those burrows may be. They seem fairly deep, and at 10-plus inches across certainly wide enough to accommodate a badger. But what was missing were the telltale claw marks badgers typically leave on the burrows’ interior walls, as well as strands of fur around the entrances – another sure-fire badger sign.

We did pick up another interesting clue, a lump of what naturalists refer to as scat, that had been left near one of the burrows. The lump’s contents – namely fur and bones – might possibly indicate its originator was a badger. But it wasn’t very big, and its condition was somewhat degraded; it could just as easily have been a pellet ejected by a raptor or scat deposited by another sort of carnivore.

But I digress.

Lisa said she will continue to watch for more burrows appearing along that hilly rise or on other embankments in that area; she also will pay close attention this spring to see if any woodchucks – another mammal that digs extensively – appear in that area after their long winter’s nap.

Remember how I said you can make interesting and unforeseen discoveries when you’re out for a walk? That’s exactly what happened next.

Previous Page|1|||

Reader Poll

Have you ever been to Bellevue Place in Batavia?

Yes, I've been in the building
Yes, but I've only seen it from the outside
No