Let's Talk About American Raccoons

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  • Опубликовано: 25 апр 2024
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    In today's video, it's time to talk about another animal that is native to North America: the raccoon.
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Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @danirizary6926
    @danirizary6926 2 месяца назад +3796

    I met a guy with a pet racoon. It quickly manipulated all the childproof latches put in place for their toddler.
    Once I saw it waddle into the kitchen, opened a childproofed cupboard, took out a box of Cheese-its, tucked it under its arm, then waddled away while using the other paw to stuff Cheese-its into its mouth.
    I was legit impressed.

    • @Biiku_
      @Biiku_ 2 месяца назад +326

      That was me, my bad. Thought I was home.

    • @barbiincognito13
      @barbiincognito13 2 месяца назад +77

      Did you close the cupboard door? 😂​@@Biiku_

    • @barbiincognito13
      @barbiincognito13 2 месяца назад +107

      I'm in the Great Lakes region and where I live we love them! They are a known part of our local wildlife, beloved and prepared for because they are crazy smart! Our locals come right up for snacks and pets, but they are very socialized so I don't know that that's always the case, or safe. Glad you got to meet one up close, they get a bad rap❤

    • @steggopotamus
      @steggopotamus 2 месяца назад

      ​@@Biiku_dude, you have a furry butt

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 2 месяца назад +68

      Never doubt the ingenuity of the Raccoon Federation!

  • @prometheus5997
    @prometheus5997 2 месяца назад +1691

    Wait until this guy finds out about opossums

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 2 месяца назад +48

      Lol, right!?

    • @harrymaciolek9629
      @harrymaciolek9629 2 месяца назад +177

      Opossums are cool, even if they are ugly. Plus they eat ticks!

    • @RatKindler
      @RatKindler 2 месяца назад +87

      Opossums only recently migrated up to Toronto, so when I saw one on my security camera I didn't know what it was. It looked like a giant rat. I eventually figured out that it was an opossum and have since seen them several times. They still seem like exotic immigrants to me.

    • @prometheus5997
      @prometheus5997 2 месяца назад +27

      @@RatKindler there is one that lives on my college campus. I see it walking around every now and then

    • @prometheus5997
      @prometheus5997 2 месяца назад

      @@harrymaciolek9629 I’ve seen some fairly cute ones

  • @fcon2002
    @fcon2002 Месяц назад +260

    I'm in Southern California. Once, I was working on my motorcycle in the garage. At dusk, the night light was triggered. I turned around to find a large raccoon walk calmly past me. He continued through my carport, down the driveway, and stopped at the curb. He paused to look left-right-left and crossed the street to the neighbor's house. I can't even get my kids to do this.

    • @TimmyTheNerd
      @TimmyTheNerd Месяц назад +17

      Also from SoCal. Specifically the Inland Empire. Didn't know they were called raccoons until I was 16. Everyone I knew growing up called them trash pandas.

    • @thehapagirl92
      @thehapagirl92 4 дня назад

      The raccoons here in SoCal are sneaky fucks! I’m in Anaheim and I’m genuinely shocked there haven’t been any raccoon mishaps at Disneyland with the cats they keep there to keep the mouse population down😂

  • @YungStinkyWinky
    @YungStinkyWinky Месяц назад +155

    Fun fact correction: raccoons don’t ’wash their food’. Their paws are extremely sensitive but less so when dry and rough, so they like to handle new things in water to soften up their paw pads so they can ‘learn’ about the food or whatever better. They are also neophilic (they actively seek new experiences, unlike most critters who fear new things), so they do this with everything they can get their hands on to learn more about it.

    • @benf91
      @benf91 Месяц назад +5

      To add a second correction even though I'm sure somebody mentioned it already, there's no raccoons in Hawaii, either.

    • @justincameron9123
      @justincameron9123 25 дней назад +2

      If the phrase "washing one's food" were ever to be true for an animal with sub-human intelligence then I would assume they weren't doing it because they know about sanitization. Humans only discovered sanitization a few centuries ago. So by all means it was washing its food

    • @tominmo8865
      @tominmo8865 21 день назад +1

      @@benf91 Once they get their hands on a US map, they will scheme how to get there. And succeed.

    • @benf91
      @benf91 21 день назад +2

      @@tominmo8865 I know this is a joke but it's not going to land for anybody who knows Hawaii. We're 2,500 miles away from the mainland, so somebody would have to bring one here on purpose, and being that it's a sensitive tropical island ecosystem, they take that stuff very seriously. My friend orders houseplants online and they won't ship a bunch of stuff here. And still she's had packages not get delivered. If you bring a pet here, there's a four month quarantine because we don't have rabies, either.

    • @Michael59279
      @Michael59279 18 дней назад

      I was under the impression the putting water in food was to do with them typically having salivary glands that underproduced saliva and the water helps the food go down easier

  • @jenniferburns2530
    @jenniferburns2530 2 месяца назад +1218

    I had an encounter with a raccoon while camping in western Pennsylvania. He limped into my campsite and looked at my daughter as if to say "feed me, a poor disabled animal." She gave him part of a hot dog bun, which he snatched, ate, and then scampered off with no sign of the limp. No doubt he used this ruse regularly.

    • @LifesGuardian
      @LifesGuardian Месяц назад +92

      Very smart little buggers.

    • @gregharris3202
      @gregharris3202 Месяц назад +69

      They are smart little tricksters

    • @josephcernansky1794
      @josephcernansky1794 Месяц назад +30

      I've seen that same "raccoon" at the intersection in my town!! Has an old, ragged coat on and a rough beard too! Even has a sign too! "Disabled...homeless and hungry...any little bit helps." Tricky buggers, those "racoons"! They'll do the darndest things to CON you out of your stuff!!

    • @kirstencorby8465
      @kirstencorby8465 Месяц назад +12

      LOL I had a cat who used to do that.

    • @DustyQatun
      @DustyQatun Месяц назад

      ​@@josephcernansky1794what the fuck is wrong withyou

  • @BAD46660
    @BAD46660 2 месяца назад +3490

    I have actually watched a raccoon stand on top of another racoon and turn a door knob to open a door to get them into a building's kitchen.

    • @dawnschoeller788
      @dawnschoeller788 2 месяца назад +366

      My brother’s neighbor caught them in his garage stacking paint cans in order to climb up to the dog food on a high shelf. They are smart and crafty! 😮

    • @lisasmith7066
      @lisasmith7066 2 месяца назад +23

      😂😂😂😂

    • @theCommentDevil
      @theCommentDevil 2 месяца назад +115

      We had some here that actually unscrewed bird feeders in order to get them down

    • @brianjones9780
      @brianjones9780 2 месяца назад +177

      This is why they're one of my favorite animals. They have a squad mentality like the penguins from that movie Madagascar

    • @bootsmith8016
      @bootsmith8016 2 месяца назад +108

      I believe it; one unlatched our ice chest, opened it, opened a carton of eggs inside it, and cracked and ate a number of eggs leaving almost clean shells neatly nested.

  • @packetgeek
    @packetgeek Месяц назад +70

    A neighbor dropped off 4 cubs, claiming that their mother had been hit by a car. We raised them. Three eventually went wild but the fourth decided she liked the easy life and hung around the house. I spent that Summer wearing sleeveless sweatshirts that were thick enouch that her climbing up onto my shoulder (even when I didn't want her to) didn't leave scratches. She turned into this giant 30 pound monster. My father's running joke was when solicitors would come to the door, he'd whistle and tell the person "you should run". ~Fifteen seconds later, this giant, asthmatic (she was very fat) furball would come scampering around the corner, wheezing as she went. Whoever was at the door never stuck around.

    • @Accountdeactivated_1986
      @Accountdeactivated_1986 19 дней назад +3

      That’s adorable. Are they good pets? They’re cute but the ones that live in city’s are MEAN. Maybe living in the city has hardened them. But I’ve been chased down the alley near my apartment running from a hissing raccoon at night. They sure don’t scamper off in fear like other critters do. How fun to have a pet raccoon though!

  • @YCIGAFSN
    @YCIGAFSN Месяц назад +18

    There are several raccoons in my neighborhood. There is one raccoon in particular that is teamed up with an opossum making their rounds every night. They are both larger and very well fed compared to the other raccoons and opossums running around my area. The first time I saw the unusual team, I was driving home and about four houses away from mine, they were working together to tip a garbage can; they got it in a couple of shoves together. I found out that they trek from the woods behind my house (at around 11:00PM), across my back yard, down to the street between my and the neighbor's house. They make their rounds, raiding pet food bowls, trash cans and anything else they can find. At around 4:30AM to 5:00AM they come back across my yard and into the woods together; obviously gorged as they are moving slower and waddling with their full bellies.

  • @scheru
    @scheru 2 месяца назад +1023

    I genuinely cackled at your "RACCOONS CAN CLIMB TREES" epiphany. It never occurred to me that anyone might not realize they could do that.

    • @nogames8982
      @nogames8982 2 месяца назад +65

      I was surprised by that also. I mean, where do you think they live most of their time? Up a tree.

    • @glahtiguy
      @glahtiguy 2 месяца назад +63

      Most people are surprised at how well they swim, I don't think I've met anyone that didn't know they were little gymnasts.

    • @MaggieLiz
      @MaggieLiz 2 месяца назад +11

      @@nogames8982 he's talking midwest, it's my understanding there aren't many dense patches of trees there.

    • @nogames8982
      @nogames8982 2 месяца назад +25

      @@MaggieLiz you don’t have to have dense patches of tall trees. Just trees in the neighborhood are enough for raccoons if the trees are big enough. or even just a few trees along the river side. I see a lot of them in places like that. Doesn’t have to be a huge, dense forest at all. But I’m sure there are a few that don’t live near many trees at all, they’ll find a place to be. Kind of like coyotes, they are everywhere now.

    • @bripa3890
      @bripa3890 2 месяца назад +31

      ​@@MaggieLizdepends where in the Midwest. Im from Wisconsin and its nothing but trees for the most part. Wisconsin, michigan and Minnesota are pretty much continuous forest outside the major cities

  • @oh2sail
    @oh2sail 2 месяца назад +726

    I woke up one night to find 5 raccoons in my kitchen. They had managed to open a window, open the refrigerator, and they were emptying it out, by passing the food piece by piece to each other and out the window.

    • @misseli1
      @misseli1 2 месяца назад +116

      They seem like characters out of a cartoon

    • @HappyLife693
      @HappyLife693 2 месяца назад +52

      Wow. They are great at teamwork.

    • @whirving
      @whirving 2 месяца назад +97

      Were the raccoons "talking"? I've seen them chatter to each other and the cadence and variation of the chatter sounded like speech. I had always passed this off as a tall tale until I actually saw it. It was a mother raccoon with a bunch of kids (whatever juvenile raccoons are called) and they came rolling down the hill through some ivy and onto the path in front of me. I was sitting down, it was dark and they didn't notice me. The mother raccoon started chattering, chastising the little ones to behave and follow. The little raccoons were jabbering away to each other too. It just seemed like speech, not random at all.

    • @thomashaapalainen4108
      @thomashaapalainen4108 2 месяца назад +48

      I had the same thing happen . A mother and her babies. The fact it was a mother with babies scared me not knowing how she'd react to me around them. Me and my 20lbs maincoon just stood there as they all looked up and slowly left through the screen door they busted open. The mother left with two fist fulls of dry cat food.😅

    • @HappyLife693
      @HappyLife693 2 месяца назад

      @@thomashaapalainen4108 ohhh snap!!

  • @tomgray8512
    @tomgray8512 Месяц назад +32

    The city of Ottawa Canada instituited a composting program. Kitchen waste was to be put in special racoon-proof bins that they had designed. It had a special hard platic top with the racoon-proof latch.
    Within a week of the bins being put out for the public, there were were videos of the racoons opening them

    • @c.a.g.7707
      @c.a.g.7707 15 дней назад +1

      I guess it's kinda like trying to squirrel-proof a bird feeder.

  • @Chris_Toney
    @Chris_Toney Месяц назад +20

    We live in a heavily wooded area on the gulf coast of the US (Gulf of Mexico). Every evening raccoons come through our yard. We started putting out dry dog food for them. They do carry parasites (through no fault of their own) so we occasionally add Ivermectin (yes, that Ivermectin) to the food to keep them healthy and avoid that they spread deadly parasites to other animals and birds.
    They are remarkably smart and well behaved. We consider them a part of our outdoor pet family.

    • @CraigerAce
      @CraigerAce Месяц назад

      I live in SW FL also. We had a ton of coons around here, until the coyotes moved in. Frankly I don’t miss them. Peace. Out.

  • @Data-qj7mo
    @Data-qj7mo Месяц назад +443

    20 years ago, I was riding back home from Sprint car races with a friend in his old truck. We were on a 4 lane highway with sparse traffic and came upon a dead raccoon in the road. Beside it were two healthy raccoons trying to wake it up and drag it out of the road. We stopped right there, he put his hazards on, and againt better judgment we got out and approached the raccoons.
    We both got about 4 or 5ft away and stopped. They saw us. One of them ran up to me and fucking looked up at me while tugging on my pantleg with its little hands. I know they're not human, but damn it, they certainly have some human-like traits. I took its behavior as a plead for help, so we carefully moved the dead raccoon off the highway, and they ran up beside it, but safe now. While sad, it's one of my favorite memories.

    • @calvinkatt662
      @calvinkatt662 Месяц назад +28

      I wonder if the dead raccoon was the mother of the two other raccoons.

    • @Data-qj7mo
      @Data-qj7mo Месяц назад +20

      @calvinkatt662 idk, maybe. They were all full grown though.

    • @chey7691
      @chey7691 Месяц назад +26

      ​@@Data-qj7mo They do remember their family, even after years.

    • @eno6712
      @eno6712 Месяц назад +23

      ​@@Data-qj7mo" full grown " can be a yearling who survived the winter. The Mothers are often very Fat and well fed even after pregnancy, they don't hibernate and are great at feeding themselves .
      They are very Human like, I honestly think they might be one of the more intelligent animal . Which Is kinds annoying.

    • @Data-qj7mo
      @Data-qj7mo Месяц назад +5

      @@eno6712 Ah, that makes sense. Thanks for the information.

  • @sydneyhammer2052
    @sydneyhammer2052 Месяц назад +285

    We found abandoned ones in our garage. We bought a playpen and raised them on catfood and bananas that they adored. They went on their way when they were older, and visited every once in a while. But when we moved, they came back to say goodbye and on breaks between loading the truck they would climb in our laps and let us pet them.

    • @gsgaming6976
      @gsgaming6976 Месяц назад +6

    • @KarlLind
      @KarlLind Месяц назад +6

      😢❤️

    • @kirstencorby8465
      @kirstencorby8465 Месяц назад +5

      That is so sweet, my gosh.

    • @bronco1199
      @bronco1199 Месяц назад +3

      Very sweet

    • @derealized797
      @derealized797 Месяц назад +16

      I've befriended the raccoons in my neighborhood, or at least, starting a few years ago i began leaving scraps and leftovers out for a pregnant racoon. She became very tame, trusting me a lot, and every year when she had new babies she would introduce them to me. So now she's gone off, not sure if she'll be back, but she left 3 of her now grown up offspring behind. Since she left they've become more comfortable with me. if i turn the light on in the back room i see them pop out in the yard to look inside at me, if i go out they all run over to greet me, follow me around acting playful. Mostly during the colder months i try harder to leave food out for them, they love grapes, they're always friendly and respectful never making a mess or anything. My point was never to make them dependent on me for food. I just wanted them to feel safe, i know some people aren't as friendly towards them, and i know certain things are good to have in their diet so... just trying to help them a little bit. They're going to eat trash anyway, but i try to offer healthier stuff along with it. fruits and nuts, helps through cold months.

  • @DuncSargent
    @DuncSargent Месяц назад +48

    I had a pet racoon when I was 2 years old. He stayed with us until he was about 15 years old. He used to sneak into the house and sleep in my crib with me. He also would open the kitchen cupboard door, pull out a fresh box of cat food, gnaw it open and spill it out for himself and the three cats.

  • @boballen9095
    @boballen9095 Месяц назад +7

    For what it's worth, where I lived years ago, a group of between 5 to 10 Raccoons quickly learned which day was garbage pickup day along an easily 5 mile stretch of a wide 4 lane city road that paralleled a freeway in California. Like most mixed business/residential areas, people are asked to bring their garbage cans out to the curb for pickup the next morning.
    Around 2am it was hilarious to see this gang of Raccoons, looking very reminiscent of East Side Story's Jets or Sharks roaming the entire width of the street and clearly owning it just looking for trouble, tipping over cans and making quite the mess while scavenging. Nobody messed with those Raccoons.

  • @McFlingleson
    @McFlingleson Месяц назад +340

    I heard a story one time about a guy who had had raccoons getting into his trash, and one day he realized that they were just rummaging through the trash to find his discarded alcohol containers to drink the dregs off the bottom, so he started leaving those on the ground next to the trash can and the raccoons left his trash alone after that, and then one day he happened to go outside at exactly the right moment to see 4 or 5 raccoons come up to his trash can to get his empty alcohol containers and have a drink together and then quietly leave.

    • @Volyren
      @Volyren Месяц назад +89

      I feed 3 now, and one is chill with petting and wrestling. Same thing. Got tired of my trash being spread around, so I just put my leftovers out for them. Now, they know to come inside if its raining. I put the food just inside the cat-door. 2 eat and enjoy the dry towels, and one just mud-foots it through the house, hops on the couch, watches tv and looks at me like "my chicken nuggets ain't gonna oven themselves, bro."
      The other 2 eat and leave, unless its storming. But they'll wait it out by the door.
      I lucked out. Mine are really chill and respectful. And they pay for their food. They bring me shinies. Mostly soda tabs and tin foil, but some coins, too. Theres 2.35$ in their college fund, after 2 years. I think Stumpy could get a job at NASA with a proper education. Yep. He'd be the best janitor at NASA.

    • @MrBendylaw
      @MrBendylaw Месяц назад +20

      Later that same gang of raccoons were busted in a tri-state drug sting. Lacking the ability to operate pipes and lighters, they'd been dealing weed to the neighborhood kids in return for 'assistance'. Thankfully, it stopped there and seemingly didn't make it out to the wider raccoon population.

    • @huitrecouture
      @huitrecouture Месяц назад +19

      That's HILARIOUS. No it's not rabies, they're just drunk!

    • @cassieporter9262
      @cassieporter9262 Месяц назад +1

      @@Volyren I have to disagree. Good janitors don't knock over trash cans.

    • @Volyren
      @Volyren Месяц назад +21

      @@cassieporter9262 as long as he's fed, neither does he. Not like he has a lot of applicable skills. I mean, he knows how to operate a cat remotely with a laser pointer, as long as the button is taped down. Much like us, raccoons apparently like running them into walls the best. Not sure how you'd translate that ability into work. Oh. Wait.
      Stumpy can teach high school.

  • @lairdcummings9092
    @lairdcummings9092 Месяц назад +332

    Trash Pandas used to live under my mother's deck, right in the middle of a town of 30K people. We have pictures of my nephew as a toddler, matching hand-to-paw with baby raccoons through the back kitchen door.
    Raccoon are intelligent, adaptable, and intensely curious. Equipped with excellent hand-paws, and surprisingly strong, they can get into pretty much any casually-closed container you can name; Special security is required.
    Oh, and those hand-paws? Freddy Krueger would be proud - they've got nasty sharp claws on them. Do NOT piss off a raccoon - you WILL regret it.

    • @simpleitsdanny
      @simpleitsdanny Месяц назад +10

      Ive seen a video on the many black hands coming out from the deck… threw me off till I found out they were raccoons.. nightmare fuel forsure

    • @khdur
      @khdur Месяц назад

      This makes me think of the Lutefisk cure for Coons living under the porch.

    • @angelacrabtree2847
      @angelacrabtree2847 Месяц назад +1

      They will also lure predators into the water and climb on their heads to drown them.

    • @benda18
      @benda18 Месяц назад +5

      Trash panda is the correct name

    • @harvbegal6868
      @harvbegal6868 Месяц назад +1

      I heard about my aunt's little dog getting messed up by one. Yeah, those claws slice and dice.

  • @MontgomeryWenis
    @MontgomeryWenis 29 дней назад +4

    Racoons broke into my house twice last summer. Just tore a hole in two different window screens and helped themselves to my cat food. My cats just sat there and watched them.

  • @garethbattersby
    @garethbattersby Месяц назад +10

    I saw a raccoon in Central Park in Broad daylight just swaggering along the grass like he was on his lunch break from a midlevel office job.

  • @Joose
    @Joose Месяц назад +207

    My ex and I actually raised a raccoon. His mom abandoned him in our yard. He was honestly a really entertaining pet to have. Once he was fully grown though, we let him come and go as he pleased.
    He eventually showed up with a bunch of friends. We knew better than to feed them, but every now and then they'd all show up and just kind of hang out.

    • @vincedibona4687
      @vincedibona4687 Месяц назад +43

      Ain’t no other kind of party than a trash panda party.

    • @joesickler5888
      @joesickler5888 Месяц назад

      Coyotes got my cat. Then a couple weeks later a coon came limping up. All messed up from the coyotes. I started feeding him cat food and he got better. He’d hang around too and I named he Ricardo. Then one day he came pawing at my slider and i yelled to my girlfriend omg I think Ricardo is pregnant. So she became Ricarda and soon I had 3 coons hanging around. I caught the baby’s in the pool once, and I ever caught the baby’s and a small possum eating cat food out of the same bowl I’d left. That one threw me through a loop.
      Edit: And is the story of how I misgendered a raccoon for nearly a year.

  • @Cindolintoe
    @Cindolintoe Месяц назад +257

    My family has adored raccoons since before I was born. My great-great-uncle was a logger in Mississippi. He once fell a tree in which a mother raccoon was nesting. She died on impact, but her babies survived. They had not yet opened their eyes, so he kept one and gave the other to my mom. The very first thing either of the babies saw was a human, so they acted much like any other pet. They are, in fact, little menaces. But they're also highly intelligent and just quirky and cute enough that they're endearing. I have endless stories about the kind of stuff my mom's raccoon did, but my favorite is that it did not understand that ice cream would melt under water. So my mom would give it a scoop of ice cream, which it would then carry to the sink, wash, then look on in bewilderment as its ice cream went down the drain.

    • @carlamarlene2927
      @carlamarlene2927 Месяц назад +30

      My husband had a raccoon n tells that if you want to frustrate your raccoon give it a sugar cube

    • @gammaboy4568
      @gammaboy4568 Месяц назад +11

      @@carlamarlene2927 cotton candy just straightup disappears, it's just lighter sugar.

    • @dennisharrell2236
      @dennisharrell2236 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@gammaboy4568There are hilarious videos of this on RUclips. The raccoons just look confused.

  • @gutz369
    @gutz369 Месяц назад +4

    When I was a child (1950's), our neighbor had a pet racoon, which he kept on a leash. His pet could undo the leash and would come over to our house and wash his hands in our bird bath. As a 6-year old, I found this highly entertaining.

  • @thedeviouspanda
    @thedeviouspanda Месяц назад +22

    American who loves raccoons here. They are so cute and so smart. They are elusive though, I've only seen a live one once. It was large too. People need to change their habits to accommodate bears, raccoons, javelinas, etc. You can't leave food out and be mad something ate it!

    • @AtlasJotun
      @AtlasJotun 25 дней назад

      I didn't leave my chickens out. The coons figured out how to open the coop door and decapitated the girls to get to their eggs. Beheaded all four of my chickens to get two or three eggs. The 'cute' coons get shot on sight now. I only wish I knew if I got the one that killed my Golden Girls (they were named after the characters in the old show).

  • @lochnessmonster5149
    @lochnessmonster5149 Месяц назад +188

    On a camping trip in Florida, we had raccoons unzip our tent and eat our bag of peanuts. Next time we left the tent we used bailing wire to tie the zippers together out of reach of the racoons. They got inside anyway and because they found no food this time, they took a shit on my dad's sleeping bag. They're bloody relentless.

    • @PK-pp3lu
      @PK-pp3lu Месяц назад +25

      The shit was a warning to have food next time or else

    • @fictionalgeographic
      @fictionalgeographic Месяц назад +4

      So polite, I've lived in Florida 30+ years and normally see them slash through the fabric of the tent wall and crawl on through

    • @Ifailedeverything
      @Ifailedeverything Месяц назад +3

      That was an FU for hoarding your peanuts 🦝

    • @rengarcia5189
      @rengarcia5189 Месяц назад +1

      You've never seen an animal use shit and puke as a weapon like the Trash Pandas do.

    • @Agiantpansy
      @Agiantpansy Месяц назад +10

      Are you sure that was a raccoon, did you see them? Sounds like textbook Florida-man behavior to me.

  • @Will_Parker
    @Will_Parker 2 месяца назад +464

    The fact they wash their food is what gives us the amazing videos of them accidentally losing their cotton candy whenever they try to eat it lol

    • @mcmackj
      @mcmackj 2 месяца назад +29

      One of my favorite GIFs! The poor critter, though. 😂

    • @danirizary6926
      @danirizary6926 2 месяца назад +8

      White bread is fun too.

    • @OrsonBuggy1958
      @OrsonBuggy1958 2 месяца назад +18

      We had a few come around for awhile.. I would throw them sugar cubes and they would take them down to the creek to wash them.. They were surprised when their paws were suddenly empty.

    • @muleb384
      @muleb384 Месяц назад +2

      @@Curmudgeon2 That isn't correct. The only mammals that lack salivary glands are dolphins and the like. Look it up for yourself :)

    • @CoffeeCakeCrumble
      @CoffeeCakeCrumble Месяц назад +21

      Fun fact, they're not washing it. The pads on their paws experience hightened sensitivity in water. They're actually super-feeling what they're holding to understand what it is.

  • @SuburbanSavage
    @SuburbanSavage Месяц назад +38

    We abandoned our garden shed after a family of raccoons nested in there. Our bikes and the lawn mower were in there. My parents would borrow the neighbors lawnmower rather than go in there. Every night they would climb out of the shed, climb the drain pipe and scurry about on roof outside of my window. You haven't experienced true terrorby waking up at 2am and have 10 pairs of eyes looking in your room.
    The closest panic I've experienced since then is walking out of my office building in Philadelphia, only to see a rat the size of a French bulldog eating the remains of a hot dog. I think it waved me.
    Now where I live, I get regularly chased by wild turkeys and occasionally by an alpaca (there's a ton of alpaca farms nearby and they escape). Sometimes these critters fight each other which is wild.
    The house across the street has a trampoline in their front yard and the turkeys and alpacas fight over it. Ninety percent of the time the turkeys win, probably due to the sheer number of them.

    • @w1975b
      @w1975b Месяц назад +6

      so do the turkeys and alpacas jump on the trampoline after winning the fight? lol just thinking that would be funny to see

    • @dancinggiraffe6058
      @dancinggiraffe6058 23 дня назад +1

      I live in San Francisco, across the street from a park. It’s a neighborhood of houses that have backyards, so there’s plenty of space for the raccoons to wander about and forage and steal. One evening as I was coming home from the bus stop, I turned the corner at the top of the hill and saw a raccoon family entering the space between my place and the house next door. There were two little kits, and two bigger raccoons that I assumed were the mother and father. The largest (the father) suddenly stood up on his hind legs, spread out his forelegs threateningly, and chittered at me. I would’ve had to pass within a couple of feet of him to get to my door, so as the rest of the family disappeared between the two houses, I said OK, and backed around the corner. I waited about 15 seconds and tried to approach my house again, but the raccoon was still there, and he reared up and threatened me again. So I backed around the corner again, waited for about a full minute, and this time when I approached my house, he was gone.

    • @sandralouth3103
      @sandralouth3103 22 дня назад +1

      I've seen foxes bouncing on ours. Unbelievably cute.

    • @SuburbanSavage
      @SuburbanSavage 16 дней назад

      @@w1975b I wish! No, they just hang out in it and under it.

  • @JasonBelliveau
    @JasonBelliveau Месяц назад +7

    i had a pet trash panda for a summer before she decide to find a new home in the woods. we never tried to domesticate her and she would come and go as she pleased.

  • @catherinelevison3310
    @catherinelevison3310 2 месяца назад +342

    They’re not afraid of people. They don’t run away, they stand their ground. I think of them as mini Grizzly bears.

    • @MoonbeamGardener
      @MoonbeamGardener 2 месяца назад +12

      That is a great description.

    • @sorryifoldcomment8596
      @sorryifoldcomment8596 2 месяца назад +10

      Not my generation of raccoons...They always back down, just slowly.
      I usually have to give them a chance to run away first, because they'll freeze when they see humans. But, when they realize I do in fact need to use the dumpster and I'm not walking away, then they go scrambling back into the trees.
      In fact, they've spooked me by running away all of a sudden before I notice them. I'm just trying to throw the trash away and suddenly a raccoon comes bursting out, desperate to get away.
      All of the raccoons I'm talking about are definitely related though. Might be more docile genes passed down?
      If they didn't back down and if they caused tenants problem, then apartment management would have had to crack down on their population. Our huge sprawling complexes here have been in the same place with the same dumpsters & tree area for at least 50 years...so maybe the company did some quelling of the raccoon population decades ago, accidentally leaving alive a couple who were well behaved and hid from humans, setting them up to enjoy all the food and have all the babies, passing down their sissy genes while also socializing them to be afraid of humans...resulting in generations of raccoons that still have a flee response, despite never being personally attacked by humans?
      I got to witness a mom raising 5 babies like 2 seasons ago, all the way until they were adult size and for a bit looked like a scary gang of raccoons all running around after one another lol (usually only see 1-3 at a time)...all of whom were surrounded by raccoons who always fled from humans 24/7.
      I mean, it sometimes takes them awhile when they get so Fuckin fat they can hardly move. 😂
      So it can feel like they're not actually trying to avoid you...but if you stop and wait, you'll realize they are leaving because of your presence. They're just so fat they struggle to move fast lol.
      The raccoons that live next to me are ridiculous haha. Hopefully they stay chill, because I will absolutely not tolerate any aggression from creatures I'm constantly within a couple feet from.

    • @flushmastercyclonis186
      @flushmastercyclonis186 Месяц назад +15

      Unlike grizzlies, the common trash panda doesn't do so well if you give it a good whack with a shovel. They tend to vacate the area rather quickly after that, assuming they retain the physical capacity.

    • @Steve-ev6vx
      @Steve-ev6vx Месяц назад +6

      .22

    • @cheriestolze
      @cheriestolze Месяц назад +6

      Sitting around a campfire once, a raccoon scratched my back, presumably to ask politely for a s’more.

  • @Foolish188
    @Foolish188 Месяц назад +86

    When I was a kid, we had four cats. They used to go in and out through the cellar. One day one rattled the cellar door latch (sat on a shelf to reach) to be let in. A minute later the second did the same. Then the male scratched at the door. He never learned to rattle the latch. I let him in. Then the fourth scratched. I was pleased because he usually just sat on the top step and waited for someone to realize that they hadn't seen him in a while. It was a huge raccoon, it walked in, looked up at me and then made a noise, the cats responded, and he went into the kitchen and joined them in eating. When he was finished, he went back to the door and waited for me to let him out. Found out later that the closest neighbor was feeding him, but was on vacation.

  • @swampjunior6585
    @swampjunior6585 Месяц назад +5

    Just a quick note, when the Spanish were exploring the Gulf Coast of the state of Mississippi they were checking out one of the barrier islands just off the mainland when they first encountered racoons. The Spanish thought this was some type of cat. To this day the island is still called Cat Island.

  • @milascave2
    @milascave2 Месяц назад +8

    I saw a racoon in the middle of a city. He walked down the sidewall at a leisurely pace. When he got to the street, he ran across the street at top speed. When he got to the side walk again, he slowed own to his former pace.

    • @twogruden9943
      @twogruden9943 18 дней назад

      Which is why I don't really believe 15M raccoons die getting hit by traffic, they're too smart for that. Of all the roadkill I have seen, very rare to see raccoon roadkill, mostly possum and deer with the occasional cat or squirrel.

  • @KnightlyNerds
    @KnightlyNerds 2 месяца назад +91

    The idiom "barking up the wrong tree" originated in the early 1800s in America, when raccoon hunting with dogs was popular. The term was originally used literally to describe when a raccoon would trick dogs into thinking it was in one tree when it had actually escaped to another.

    • @jerelull9629
      @jerelull9629 Месяц назад +8

      I heard the story as hunting squirrels, since they're light enough to jump from tree to tree using the longest, lightest branches. The dogs properly identified the trees they climbed from the ground, but didn't follow their Arial escape to the next tree.

    • @whatabouttheearth
      @whatabouttheearth Месяц назад +3

      ​@@jerelull9629
      Dogs for squirrel hunting? I've only known of dogs to be used for hunting racoons

    • @pong9000
      @pong9000 Месяц назад +2

      But everybody knows dogs lose their minds for squirrels.

    • @rachelclark6393
      @rachelclark6393 Месяц назад

      Yeah I had a racoon stuffed animal named 'curious the raccoons, and my grandfather ( a country boy from the Carolinas moved to the big city) used to tease me about his past " 'coon hunting" in his youth with his trusty dog.

  • @ldcraig2006
    @ldcraig2006 2 месяца назад +184

    They're sometimes called "trash pandas." We had them in our attic, years ago. They'd gotten in through the vent openings in the soffit. We had a company come and trap them, and when they were sure they'd gotten all of them, they boarded over the vent opening (not a smart idea, as that can lead to dry rot in your attic). Anyway, it wasn't too long before the raccoons were back, and since we're poor, we couldn't afford to have the removal company come back. So we bought some live-traps and caught them ourselves. They'd worked their way down the walls and ended up in our basement. We took them out to a forest preserve a few miles away and released them. That was fine, for a while. Then the squirrels came. You have no idea how annoying it is to have wildlife tap-dancing over your head at 2 in the morning. 😡

    • @GangstarComputerGod
      @GangstarComputerGod Месяц назад +6

      I had that issue with squirrels and yes it will drive you insane

    • @HealthyDisrespectforAuthority
      @HealthyDisrespectforAuthority Месяц назад +4

      @@GangstarComputerGod my barn cat took care of the attic squirrels around here. He wouldn't be close to a match for a raccoon though.

    • @stephensmith1118
      @stephensmith1118 Месяц назад +6

      you need to remove the squirrels they tend to eat electrical cables which can lead to a fire

    • @jerelull9629
      @jerelull9629 Месяц назад +3

      Squirrels are the forgotten rodent, not quite annoying/dangerous enough to be eradicated. Raccoons aren't far behind, as far as I'm concerned.

    • @ldcraig2006
      @ldcraig2006 Месяц назад +1

      @@stephensmith1118, we did. We had a windfall tax return about six years ago that allowed up to get them removed, and get the trees they were used to access the roof taken down (the trees were dying anyway, so it was a safety issue as well).

  • @EvelynNdenial
    @EvelynNdenial Месяц назад +5

    my sister had a racoon once. it was the cutest thing i have ever seen, it would ride the dog around the house and when you sat on the couch it would get up there and play with your hair. it would also occasionally do little front flips, the fat little thing curling up and flopping forward onto its back.

  • @jasondubois3399
    @jasondubois3399 Месяц назад +3

    I spent a year living on an army base in Southern California from March 2021 to March 2022. I got to know my local population of raccoons fairly well. For a while there was some kind of plumbing problem in the mess hall and so they simply fed us outside, and the raccoons had to be chased off multiple times each morning. Because they were living in close proximity to humans, they got relatively comfortable with us and I was once even able to convince one to accept food out of my hand.

  • @HillbillyArchmage
    @HillbillyArchmage Месяц назад +99

    My favorite raccoon incident: As a kid, I was riding with my parents on a brief sightseeing drive through part of the Great Smoky Mountains. A large van in front of us was slowly cruising along, the family inside pointing out all the wildlife to their kids, sometimes throwing treats to them. A pair of raccoons, just off the road on the passenger side, was practically putting on a show for the tourists as they played and begged for food. The van stopped to feed them.
    Meanwhile, we watched a third raccoon make a fast scramble in through an open window on the other side of the van, behind the driver; and then immediately come diving back out the same way, with what looked to be a full unopened bag of jumbo marshmallows. As soon as he did, the first two raccoons ran off to join him.
    Don't feed the animals, folks.

    • @stevenr5534
      @stevenr5534 Месяц назад +4

      Yes! Don't feed the animals. And keep a watch so that the animals don't just help themselves.

    • @Variety_Pack
      @Variety_Pack Месяц назад +8

      They'll bamboozle you with a show and then eat your lunch!

    • @silver1step
      @silver1step Месяц назад +6

      Racoons are basically yogi bear but like for real life. They will run a show & dance to steal your picnic basket.

    • @FrogsForBreakfast
      @FrogsForBreakfast Месяц назад

      Not only will they steal from you, but they are much more likely to get hit by a car.

    • @achimdemus-holzhaeuser1233
      @achimdemus-holzhaeuser1233 Месяц назад +2

      And don't show them Yogi Bear Cartoons.

  • @stephenlocilento649
    @stephenlocilento649 Месяц назад +131

    I was a Diesel mechanic in the Army back in the 90’s. We sometimes used the back of our Deuce & a Half truck as a place to sleep while drilling in the woods. Two mechanics would be in sleeping bags on top of the work benches, the third on a cot on the floor between the benches. One night I was on the bench sleeping & woke to what sounded to me like a person with a higher pitched voice mumbling and grunting in their sleep. When my eyes adjusted I realized that the biggest damn Raccoon I’d ever seen was sitting right on the chest of my sleeping Staff Sgt enjoying a bag of chips someone left out! It liked the chips so much it was making happy noises. I froze, afraid to make a noise or move & freak it out. This went on for 5-10 minutes before it turned around and walked right out of the truck. The Sgt. slept through the whole thing.

    • @ClyDIley
      @ClyDIley Месяц назад +4

      Yep, thats Gary

    • @tony8570
      @tony8570 Месяц назад

      Camp attebury memories

    • @jasonbeck6104
      @jasonbeck6104 Месяц назад

      Seeing this side story made my morning... 😂😂😂

    • @veprstreak3041
      @veprstreak3041 Месяц назад +4

      That’s Army tired, when you sleep through a raccooning

    • @stephenlocilento649
      @stephenlocilento649 Месяц назад

      @@veprstreak3041 true that!

  • @abbiebeast
    @abbiebeast Месяц назад +2

    We live here in NH - absolutely love our raccoons we've got a whole family living under our shed in the back yard and enjoy seeing them all the time up on our deck.

  • @1crazypj
    @1crazypj 25 дней назад +1

    I moved to Florida from Britain 25 years ago.
    Our cat at the time brought a complete racoon family (3 of them) to the back porch to share his food (cat was a bit crazy, herded the ducks on pond across the street as well, brought a kitten home 3:00am one night, etc)
    The largest racoon was at least 3 ft high.

  • @alicerudolph8106
    @alicerudolph8106 Месяц назад +221

    My late Dad told me that he'd tried to put a stick through the lid handles of his two old-fashioned metal trash cans to deter raccoons. He later saw a raccoon pull out the stick, break it in half, and toss it aside, before digging into the trash.

    • @PhantomQueenOne
      @PhantomQueenOne Месяц назад +16

      They don't like chilies or mint. To keep them out of the trash blend up the hottest chilies you can find with water and brush it on the inside of the trash can lid (not where you touch it). You could do this with dried pepper flakes, but you have to add water as well. You can do the same with mint. The strongest mint you can find, or mint extract. Spread in the inside of the lid.
      If they get into bird food, put chilli flakes (like the kind that pizza places have) and mix it with the bird food (I have a five gallon pail for my bird food) not many raccoons in the center of town where I live) so I don't need to. You don't need a whole lot, but mix in very well. Birds can't taste the chilies, and it doesn't bother them at all. Raccoons, after a taste will more than likely leave it alone. Like all mammals, raccoon's bodies react to the capsaicin in the chilies. Wear food safe gloves when you mess with chilies!
      Don't put mint in bird food, it can be toxic... to even humans. That's why extract is in very small bottles.

  • @JoeCensored
    @JoeCensored 2 месяца назад +128

    The cutest, most frustrating, and clever animal ever.

  • @jefferyparker4277
    @jefferyparker4277 Месяц назад +4

    When I was I kid, my mom loved raccoons. I grew up in a house with full of raccoon pictures and figurines.

  • @anastasiagreene5967
    @anastasiagreene5967 Месяц назад +3

    Back in the 80s, my Dad brought home an orphaned raccoon. 2 babies were beside it's dead mother. His friend took the other baby. We raised him for awhile then released him to my grandparents wild property. A definite highlight of my childhood.

  • @robwalsh9843
    @robwalsh9843 2 месяца назад +104

    Fun fact. In South America there once existed a now-extinct raccoon species called Chapalmania that was comparable in size and strength to the American black bear. Speaking as someone who has had to deal with bears and raccoons raiding my kitchen, I don't want to even imagine having to deal with bear-sized raccoons.

    • @saratemp790
      @saratemp790 2 месяца назад +4

      Wow.

    • @PaulGuy
      @PaulGuy 2 месяца назад +26

      Tbf, black bears are kind of bear-sized raccoons already.

    • @nerfherder4284
      @nerfherder4284 2 месяца назад +1

      Racoons are actually related to bears, not rodents like rats.

    • @darter9000
      @darter9000 2 месяца назад +8

      How about a 100 raccoon sized bears instead?

    • @robwalsh9843
      @robwalsh9843 2 месяца назад +5

      @@darter9000 those are bear cubs, and they're cute, but I've seen the damage they can do, so I'll politely decline.

  • @arandomgoalie
    @arandomgoalie Месяц назад +123

    I love how Laurence occasionally just finds a unique American animal, hyperfixates on it enough to make a video (much to our delight), and then just keeps marveling at the differences between Britain and America until he finds the next fascinating American animal. Please never stop doing this. 😊

  • @Sunmonks
    @Sunmonks 25 дней назад +2

    A raccoon once broke into my downstairs neighbor’s apartment, clawed his leg up all shredded and bloody, stole his small dog, and ran out and up a tree. They are monsters.

    • @tombolo4120
      @tombolo4120 25 дней назад

      Jeez! We had one trying to get a small cat in a tree out back. The sound it was making was bone chilling.. The cat soon fell and ran to another tree. Racoon decided to take an adjacent power pole. Lucky for the cat, the racoon touched a 1200v line and ran back down at free fall speed. The neighbors left the cat when they moved so we adopted him and named him Spark.

  • @yawnberg
    @yawnberg 9 дней назад +3

    If you haven't learned about possums yet, please do. They are remarkable; the unsung heroes of American urban wildlife.

  • @sarahbrown2789
    @sarahbrown2789 Месяц назад +181

    When my husband first started gardening he had a huge problem with raccoons ransacking his garden at night. He asked his grandpa what to do since fencing and traps weren't working. He asked if adding a net covering the garden would help. Grandpa shook his head and said that we'd just have to grow enough food to share. I've found a deep respect for raccoons and enjoy all their fascinating quirks.

    • @Phlebas
      @Phlebas Месяц назад +12

      My parents had been having the same issue in their garden. They tried a bunch of things, including setting up a little electrified wire around the area, all to no effect. Eventually they just gave up and started recording the racoons for their entertainment.

    • @sueharviel6510
      @sueharviel6510 Месяц назад +19

      My granny used to say to always plant three times more than you think you need because the bugs and animals will eat the extra.

    • @FeedMeSalt
      @FeedMeSalt Месяц назад +10

      You can handle racoons with one single evening spent outside every two or three months?
      My old job working for circle K for example. I spent all night awake watching my yard cameras, when they showed up I'd run home and "remove them" usually got about three months before a new one moved in.
      You can absolutely stop lol 😂 they don't like .22 air rifles much.

    • @ut000bs
      @ut000bs Месяц назад +9

      @@sueharviel6510 my mother was the age of a lot of your great grandmothers (born 1918) and she used to say four times more. Both us and the wildlife appeared to have plenty.

    • @KiKiQuiQuiKiKi
      @KiKiQuiQuiKiKi Месяц назад

      @@sueharviel6510I wonder if that’s whatever God intended❤️🧡💛💚🩵💙💜

  • @katheryns1219
    @katheryns1219 2 месяца назад +150

    My aunt had a racoon, which was small, silvery and pretty, so she'd take it to parties. When they got home, she would find other women's shiny objects in her purse. She eventually gave it to a studio in Hollywood, and it was the raccoon on the Beverly HIllbillies. She had another one, a big male, who liked to get into the toilet and flush it. Instant spa! Once I woke up in the wee hours of the morning to hear our low hanging windchimes ringing like crazy. I looked out the window and saw a racoon banging on the chimes. Then it started dancing to the noise and then made a somersault. Some nights later, I caught four of them doing it.

    • @stephenbonaci4831
      @stephenbonaci4831 2 месяца назад +22

      Raccoon Dance Party is my new favorite raccoon story!

    • @blackbearish
      @blackbearish 2 месяца назад +7

      musical trashpandas.

    • @nathangamble125
      @nathangamble125 2 месяца назад +6

      "I looked out the window and saw a racoon banging on the chimes. Then it started dancing to the noise and then made a somersault."
      Are you sure you weren't dreaming?
      This is one of those stories that is just on the edge of plausibility. Are raccoons actually agile enough to do a somersault?

    • @katheryns1219
      @katheryns1219 2 месяца назад +8

      @@nathangamble125 Oh, I was not dreaming at all. I was shocked myself. And yes, they're very agile, and they were obviously having a great time.

    • @blackbearish
      @blackbearish 2 месяца назад +5

      @@nathangamble125 i think they are. they have flexability that is astonishing. also isn't their intellegence meant to be akin to that of a three year old child? something like that.

  • @truthteller880
    @truthteller880 Месяц назад +1

    I love the little guys. I grew up rural and even I only ever saw any twice in the wild. Once was a group of kits at the edge of the woods, and once was in a parking lot near a dumpster.

  • @AzrockOmegaMan
    @AzrockOmegaMan 25 дней назад +1

    American of the New England Variety here... My mom had a pet raccoon when I was a wee boy in the early 70's. It would curl up in my grandmother's lap like a cat, and even the house cats got on with the creature as well. 😊

  • @coranova
    @coranova Месяц назад +158

    I feed our raccoons every evening on our patio. We've been doing this for almost 6 years. They always bring their babies to meet us in the spring💙

    • @adamtedder1012
      @adamtedder1012 Месяц назад +8

      Same here. We have about 30 of em.

    • @mdnghtwlf
      @mdnghtwlf Месяц назад +6

      We've been doing it for about a year now. We've got 2 distinct families, and they even get along fairly well with our outdoor cats. The runt of one of litters gets his own bowl by my leg so he doesn't get bullied and if I don't put his food out soon enough he'll come tug on my pants leg.

    • @billyyank5807
      @billyyank5807 Месяц назад +5

      Do ya'll know how toxic raccoon poop is? You should probably look into that,especially if you have pets!

    • @adamtedder1012
      @adamtedder1012 Месяц назад +4

      @billyyank5807 not sure about others but most raccoons do not deficate in the places they eat. Our raccoons have never pooped in our yard. They go to the woods in back. Even so we boil water and add some bleach and clean the area ever so often.

    • @coranova
      @coranova Месяц назад +1

      @@adamtedder1012 same! They only deficate away from our house!

  • @bryancorrell3689
    @bryancorrell3689 2 месяца назад +388

    Plenty of people in the US like raccoons, but there are two main reasons they are disliked:
    1 - They can turn a trashcan into a disaster area. If humans eat it, so will raccoons. And they'll happily scrounge for our leftovers.
    2 - In the US they are one of the main vectors for rabies (along with bats and skunks.) Worldwide dogs are overwhelmingly the most common vector, but we actually do a pretty good job vaccinating them here. Rabies in humans is very rare in the US (low single digits each year,) but it's not something you want to mess with. Treatment is very effective if done early, but once symptoms appear it's close to 100% fatal.

    • @-Keith-
      @-Keith- 2 месяца назад +32

      They can carry a lot more diseases that are pretty bad for humans too.

    • @mi2lq933
      @mi2lq933 2 месяца назад +58

      3- They will brutally murder all of your chickens.

    • @bugvswindshield
      @bugvswindshield 2 месяца назад +32

      um, ya.... about 5 people die of rabies in the USA per year. Most years none from a raccoon.
      You have a much greater chance of being killed by a human, lighting, gator, deer, rattle snake, falling off a ladder. etc.
      1.5 people die in volleyball accidents per year.
      What I'm saying is...fear mongering is horrible trait.

    • @jakeaurod
      @jakeaurod 2 месяца назад +14

      They also spread worms, like Baylisascaris procyonis.

    • @Leightr
      @Leightr 2 месяца назад +13

      @@mi2lq933 And ducks too.

  • @MicheleSanders
    @MicheleSanders 5 дней назад

    I am American and am proud to tell you that I ADORE raccoons, Lawrence! They are intelligent, resourceful, adaptive, cooperative, clean and in every way appealing! Also I have never had raccoons rummage through my garbage but then I have kept the bins in the garage or used locking lids on the bins. In any case I respect them by not feeding them and just leaving them alone to just be them. Thanks for another great video! 🦝😊

  • @LynnThompsonAuthor
    @LynnThompsonAuthor Месяц назад +1

    The back 1/3 of my property goes down a ravine to a creek and is covered with woods. One of my cats likes to stay outdoors inside the pool screen most of the time. One morning I happened to be looking out the kitchen window overlooking the pool when I saw a raccoon come out of the woods and waddle over to the area of the pool screen where my cat normally hangs out. When she wasn't there, the raccoon turned around and waddled back into the woods. I have a friend who feeds them from her back porch. The foods she feeds them include cut-up hot dogs, marshmallows, little cookies, and grapes. The mama raccoon especially loves the grapes, and will seek them out above all the other offerings. She'll pop the grape in her mouth and tilt her head back so the juice can run down her throat as she bites into it, almost with a smile on her face. So cute! They're adorable, but when I once tried to grow tomatoes and cucumbers on the outside of my pool screen, the raccoons in the woods ate all the fruit on my "crops" and I didn't get anything!

  • @Zyra19
    @Zyra19 Месяц назад +197

    Trash pandas are adorable but also wicked smart & mischievous

    • @jonathannelson103
      @jonathannelson103 Месяц назад +1

      Found the New Englander.

    • @Zyra19
      @Zyra19 Месяц назад +5

      @@jonathannelson103 Nope, never been there

    • @jonathannelson103
      @jonathannelson103 Месяц назад +3

      @@Zyra19 I'd just never heard anyone outside of New England say "wicked smart".

    • @michaeltaylor5939
      @michaeltaylor5939 Месяц назад +3

      "Trash panda" was only amusing for about 5 minutes 20 years ago.

    • @jathompson37
      @jathompson37 29 дней назад

      They actually are related to pandas.

  • @peccant
    @peccant Месяц назад +84

    They remind me of particularly bold and fearless toddlers. I had one stand next to our car and watch me as I chowed down on a burger in the parking lot at 3 am, as one does. Being enamoured, I rolled down the window and held part of my burger out to him... he walked up, gently took it with his little hands, moved back a step, and stood there to enjoy sharing a burger with me. No wonder they're a bit of a city mascot in Toronto.

    • @paradisepipeco
      @paradisepipeco Месяц назад +5

      They do tend to be more polite in Canada.

    • @angelousmortis8041
      @angelousmortis8041 Месяц назад +3

      With claws and fangs and are smart enough to open locks that foil toddlers.

    • @BrendanBeckett
      @BrendanBeckett Месяц назад

      @@paradisepipeco Believe me they will still ruin your day if the trash isn't secured.

    • @paradisepipeco
      @paradisepipeco Месяц назад

      @@BrendanBeckett Good point. I have lived in bear country where that is required, where the raccoons aren't the biggest problem.
      Also, Canadians are indeed known to be polite, but in the food service industry, there is a saying that probably applies to furry trash foragers as well; regardless of their relative proximity to the 49th parallel.....
      *Q.* _What's the difference between a canoe and a Canuck?_
      *A.* _A canoe can tip._

    • @BrendanBeckett
      @BrendanBeckett Месяц назад +1

      @@paradisepipeco Probably because (I'm guessing) tipping culture originated in the US, and Canada has a bit of European streak where tipping isn't a thing. I hate it myself, pay your workers! Tips should be for exceptional service.
      In any case as a Canadian I can say the polite stereotype isn't particularly true, at least not in major cities. We might say sorry if you bump into us but that's just our word for "hey what the fuck". And get any Canadian talking about US vs Canada in the RUclips comments and you'll see much more toxic jingoism from the Northern side.

  • @constancebenson2197
    @constancebenson2197 4 дня назад

    I live across from a park in New York City where lives a family of raccoons beneath the boundary wall. Every evening, someone from a local food shop shows up and puts the day's leftovers on top of the wall. At dusk as many as eight raccoons clamber out to sniff around and sample the wares. People show up to exclaim how cute they are photograph them. Honestly, we love our raccoons!

  • @denisebrooks4513
    @denisebrooks4513 2 месяца назад +495

    Coming into the kitchen in the middle of the night to find a momma raccoon with her three babies chowing down on the dog kibble is not fun at all. They had let themselves in through the doggie door.

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 2 месяца назад +38

      I don't have a dog, but I hear that there are doors that can be activated by a tag on your dog's collar. So your dog is the only one getting in

    • @CDCI3
      @CDCI3 2 месяца назад +19

      I mean... That SOUNDS fun. I promise you, I would have stopped, tried to slowly move to a sitting position, and watched them if I hadn't already scared them off.

    • @canisblack
      @canisblack 2 месяца назад +14

      I don't have a doggie door. Stories like this are why I never will. I've had my own poor experiences with them which make me die a little inside every time I hear or see somebody calling them "trash pandas."

    • @ljosephdumas3113
      @ljosephdumas3113 2 месяца назад +24

      My father grew up in Kentucky in the 1920s-30s. He had a pet raccoon (as well as a pet ferret), so I've always had a soft spot for the critters - even when they smashed my trash. 🦝🦝🦝

    • @robertveith6383
      @robertveith6383 2 месяца назад +14

      You can't continue to not have any changes with your doggy door, or this will happen again, or some other unwanted creature will get inside.

  • @Slowplaymae
    @Slowplaymae Месяц назад +192

    When I was a girl growing up in New England, one of the perks of having Wendy’s for supper was the raccoons. Let me explain… in true American fashion when the parents were too tired to bother with a home cooked meal we would pop through the Wendy’s drive through and then pull into a spot in the parking lot to eat, and at this Wendy’s their dumpsters backed onto a large open natural area, so we would, as a family, be sitting at dusk, eating our fast food and watching the family of raccoons that were also sitting there, at dusk, eating their fast food and watching us! Even as a kid I saw the humor in the situation and we were a pro-raccoon family so we would make up stories about the raccoon family and sort of mystery science theater their antics in the dumpster. If you’ve ever seen Linda Belcher’s love for their raccoons it was quite similar, and while we weren’t quite as creative with names, we stuck to r names like Ricky and Rachel and Rebecca and stuff, I for one love our little trash bandits here in North America!
    Thank you for coming to my TED talk.

    • @Broken_robot1986
      @Broken_robot1986 Месяц назад +17

      I've always had good experiences with them, they always seem to have a positive attitude, and who doesn't love little hands?

    • @josephwilliams1915
      @josephwilliams1915 Месяц назад +15

      That sounds awesome, hahaha.
      My aunt had a pet raccoon. It was blind and abandoned. I loved that raccoon. I used to play video games and feed him cheetos hahahaha. He would climb all over the couch and cuddle.

    • @matthewfors114
      @matthewfors114 Месяц назад +5

      that is new england for ya

    • @LordOceanus
      @LordOceanus Месяц назад +4

      That is very wholesome

    • @AndromacheNY
      @AndromacheNY Месяц назад +3

      I love raccoons. so so much. ❤

  • @Chi_Nurse
    @Chi_Nurse 21 день назад +1

    “Lower level trixter spirit “ … yep! That tracks ! 😂

  • @EyeofSekhmet
    @EyeofSekhmet Месяц назад +2

    I've raised raccoons in Ontario, Canada. They are an impressive creature. So intelligent and able to get into almost anything. They will eat literally anything. They try to be scary, if threatened, but honestly they are pretty silly if you watch them. I love watching them pad the ground with their little hands and wash their food ☺️

  • @ShadoeLandman
    @ShadoeLandman 2 месяца назад +287

    I'm an American who likes raccoons. In the town I used to live in, they moved around town via the storm drain system, but they learned to be quite tame, and would go up to people sitting on their porches and beg for food, and if they learned to trust you, would even bring their babies to you. My cat made friends with one. The deer were really tame, too. And my cat also tried to make friends with the deer, but I discouraged it because I was afraid she'd get accidentally stepped on if a deer panicked and bolted.

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 2 месяца назад +11

      I have seen them in the sewer system here, too. A family of them live near the university and would emerge from one sewer drain at 7:00 p.m. and walk about 30 m down to the next train and pop back in. But they could be seen in the trees on the cliffs and on campus

    • @TechnicolorMammoth
      @TechnicolorMammoth 2 месяца назад +15

      I think you used to live in Heaven.

    • @Dfarrey
      @Dfarrey 2 месяца назад +30

      I'm American, and I love raccoons. My sister raised an orphaned raccoon when I was younger, and he was a great little weirdo.

    • @FLPhotoCatcher
      @FLPhotoCatcher 2 месяца назад +2

      @@LindaC616 Wow, they ride the train?

    • @caroljo420
      @caroljo420 2 месяца назад +19

      Be careful. A friend of mine had raccoons coming in their cat door and eating the cat's food, but one day they killed his cat. So he sat on the kitchen floor overnight, and when the raccoon came in, he shot it. There are some people who won't be nice when you hurt their cat, and I'm one of them.

  • @paulnormandin5267
    @paulnormandin5267 2 месяца назад +115

    Racoons are one of the toughest animals in nature. They are also remarkably intelligent and pretty much anything you can think of to keep them out they will figure out and defeat. I had a friend that found a baby one and brought it home. When it grew up, he taught it to open the fridge (her tied a cloth to the door handle that hung down) and get him a beer. The best part was he would sit on the floor and put one front paw on the top of the can and pull up the tab with the other. You had to take the can at this point or end up with a drunken racoon. Amazing animals. Apart from some rare examples though, they generally don't make good pets as they tend to be highly destructive and will reduce your furniture to component parts for their own amusement.

    • @user-ez6vk2bw7q
      @user-ez6vk2bw7q Месяц назад +7

      The book "Rascal" (on which the Disney movie of the same name was based) is an example of the rare occasion when an orphaned baby raccoon can become a good pet. And your assessment of their natural intelligence is correct. I remember one scene early in the book where the author described how he gave baby Rascal a sugar cube which the raccoon then tried to wash like it was ordinary food only to be perplexed when it dissolved in his tiny "hands". Rascal never repeated that mistake. Smart!

    • @HealthyDisrespectforAuthority
      @HealthyDisrespectforAuthority Месяц назад +5

      I wish fire ants were their main diet preference.

    • @DENVEROUTDOORMAN
      @DENVEROUTDOORMAN Месяц назад

      No that would be Mountain Lions

    • @pamelasimone5084
      @pamelasimone5084 Месяц назад

      They have long memories and if one feels slighted, he may one day get revenge.

    • @stevethepocket
      @stevethepocket Месяц назад

      @@user-ez6vk2bw7q There's a video that gets reposted all the time where some wiseguy gives a raccoon cotton candy with the same result.

  • @Dismythed
    @Dismythed 13 часов назад

    I'm American and I love raccoons. They're a minor nuisance, but they are adorable and super smart. I once played with a couple of raccoons with a water hose at 10am. They loved playing in the water.

  • @keeftaylor834
    @keeftaylor834 Месяц назад +2

    They are mischievous little turds...I have to use bungee cords to secure the lid of my trash cans...but damned if they aren't cute.
    I worked at a humane society fresh out of high school and someone surrendered a litter (5) of little raccoons whose mom was hit by a car. The girls working there syringe fed (and later bottle) them and raised them until they could feed themselves. After that, they were put in a cage with a 8' tall hollow tree stump rooted in a cement floor base surrounded by chain link fence covered by a tarp...and I was their only human contact (they were nearly full grown). I learned after day 1 not to enter the cage to remove the food bowls before washing off the floor with a garden hose. Fortunately I had already overcome my animal fecal phobia beforehand.
    As much as I love dogs, my highlight of everyday was taking care of those masked bandits. As soon as I walked up towards the cage they started climbing it and reaching their paws out. I'd let each one grab on my fingers and stroke their paws for a few moments, and say it was "hose time," and they typically scurried up the tree while I unwound the hose from the reel and cleaned their cage. After that, I would change out their food and water bowls and wouldn't get halfway through before I had at least 2 climbing up my legs, racing towards their coveted shoulder stoop.
    One would specifically climb up to my left armpit and just hang there...which as you could imagine with their nails was not exactly comfortable for me. He would shriek, and I would say better luck next time for the shoulder. After 3 days of this I was going to let him down so I pushed up on his side with my left arm to brace him and let him down, but he curled up his back end into my hand and relaxed and quit shrieking as I held him like a baby. I thought that was cute immediately, but then I remembered all the girls fed them right handed holding them like this. With no bottle, I just rubbed his belly. He was content with that, and sprawled out all four legs, occasionally grabbing my right hand with both his front paws and lifting his head to lick my hand, while the others used me as a tree stump to climb up and down from. For the next 6 weeks that was our daily routine.
    I quit working there before they were released back into nature. I honestly don't know if they adapted well after being raised and nurtured by humans. It was a unique experience that I often reflect about with joy.

  • @Fooma777
    @Fooma777 Месяц назад +45

    One time, I was staying with my brother in Austin, Texas. He lived about 15-20 min outside downtown Austin in a very tree heavy suburb. One night as I stole outside for a smoke, I happened upon what had to be about 15 raccoons all circling this one absolute UNIT of a trash panda (~30lbs minimum). It was hilariously spooky. Ever seen those ant death spirals? Think that, but raccoons.
    I unconsciously went “bwah” or some such noise and they all froze, looked right at me, and then scattered like fuzzy roaches, all except the Big One. He never moved a muscle, looking dead at me as if to say “bwah indeed, ya pink ape”. I had my smoke with him and the other raccs had started to creep back as I went inside, still unnerved but feeling like I’d achieved peaceful coexistence.

  • @anitawindbigler7100
    @anitawindbigler7100 Месяц назад +39

    We had one,named Ricky.
    A friend brought it to us as a baby, because moma had got hit on road.
    Our dogs didn't care as long as we told them an animal was a" baby".
    When got older ,we opened front door little bit daily, so it could go outside . At first, a sneek for a moment, each day a bit longer.
    It left one day, to not stay inside anymore. But came back to porch each night to rest. Scared people occasionally, but was never mean. We knew it lived on porch, on cold winter nights, we'd leave snacks . Ricky could have gotten in, but never tried.
    Just knew it was safe on porch. Even the cats& dogs weren't bothered ..❤

  • @Failed_Tenor
    @Failed_Tenor Месяц назад +1

    When I lived in Georgia, raccoons would eat the cat food we left on the porch. My cats were gray tabbies, so I wondered if they thought my cats were raccoons too especially since they never fought which isn’t always the case.

  • @ChardeeMacdennis339
    @ChardeeMacdennis339 Месяц назад +2

    I’m American and I love Raccoons 😊 but I love animals in general. My mom has a raccoon that lives behind her house and he comes to her door for food and will take it from her hands! She lives on protected wetland and has all kinds of animals visit her.

  • @deepwaters7242
    @deepwaters7242 Месяц назад +78

    I worked at a lighthouse in northern California. We had lots of raccoons! We had pit toilets next to the cliff, and it wasn't uncommon to find them in the pits when it was super cold and windy. They also are very smart- they learned that if they stood under the "Don't feed the raccoons " sign, and waited for the humans to go click click with little metal things, that they would get treats. They learned to pose for the cameras! And they also knew that they could trap the humans in the kiosk/ticket booth, that we would throw out snacks in order to leave. The mother raccoons took advantage of this one in particular. They also can open some doors and latches and unscrew jars.

    • @billyyank5807
      @billyyank5807 Месяц назад +3

      Yea,they have thumbs!!

    • @aaronburkeen6409
      @aaronburkeen6409 Месяц назад

      That sounds like something monkeys would do. The locking people in and only letting them out when offered food. I hope they do not learn that this also works with cell phones.

  • @kandreasworld4374
    @kandreasworld4374 Месяц назад +161

    I am an American and I luv Raccoons. I have a family of them living under my porch along with a family of groundhogs and an opossum. I put cat food and left overs on the porch with fresh water and they leave my trash cans alone. Stray cats in the area come up to eat as well. Everyone gets along and I catch the feral cats and get them fixed. Everyone is happy. There is nothing cuter than watching the raccoons babies climb about and explore the porch for the first time each year. One baby once picked up a river rock and used it to knock on the door until I answered it because the food bowl was empty. They are very sweet and very smart.

    • @figurativelyliterally9796
      @figurativelyliterally9796 Месяц назад +9

      That sounds so charming ❤

    • @NocturnalDoom
      @NocturnalDoom Месяц назад +9

      Thank you for sharing ❤ I came here for this comment. It feels like most people just don’t appreciate them at all.

    • @AnaLucia-wy2ii
      @AnaLucia-wy2ii Месяц назад

      They’re so cute. ❤ But it’s not cute if they get into your garbage.

    • @653j521
      @653j521 Месяц назад +1

      You catch feral cats you get fixed? Maybe not entirely happy about the whole thing? :)

    • @huwhitecavebeast1972
      @huwhitecavebeast1972 Месяц назад +1

      As an American I fully agree with all this. Raccoons are wonderful animals. I just saved one with a broken leg last week.

  • @AudraK
    @AudraK Месяц назад

    The neighborhood I grew up in was a small peninsula surrounded by marshland and every night we would sprinkle out a bowl or two of dry cat food. We would get anywhere from 2 or 3 at a time to up to 13 at a time. It took years but eventually you could tell which ones grew up on the cat food diet and which didn’t. You’d see mama come up with her new babies. And watch them get used to you watching them from the window. They will forever be communal cats in my heart. Forever living outside but still being a member of the family. I still wait for the day that my dad tells me that he has finally won the trust of the group and brought them inside the home.

  • @patrickhayes3099
    @patrickhayes3099 26 дней назад

    One of my favorite animals. Childhood neighbor was a veterinarian and had raccoons that had been injured and unable to go back to the wild. Never tamed, though they were really calm.

  • @randalmayeux8880
    @randalmayeux8880 2 месяца назад +31

    Hi Laurence! When I was homeless in Fort Worth, Texas, I camped beside a railroad track, not too far from a creek. I was living in a makeshift tent. At night, whole families of raccoons would come to visit at night. They would rummage through my meager belongings, ostensibly looking for food. One evening I was awakened by a particularly large one standing on my chest. He was licking my nose! I sat up and he retreated. Meanwhile, his compatriots had absconded with my backpack, dragging it down the hill and scattering it's contents. Despite the fact that I rarely had anything for them to eat, they continued to be nightly visitors.

    • @skaldlouiscyphre2453
      @skaldlouiscyphre2453 Месяц назад +2

      I think they were volunteering to help you with dinner.

    • @pong9000
      @pong9000 Месяц назад

      In which country is the most literate and well-spoken, relegated to second-class citizens?

  • @Syphrianna
    @Syphrianna 2 месяца назад +17

    Raccoons are smart, bold and pushy. I once opened a "critter-proof" trash can lid in a national park only to find a raccoon inside. He immediately clambered out and started trying to get the sandwich I had in my hand. I wound up eating lunch in the car.

  • @jfder3677
    @jfder3677 Месяц назад +1

    My vet had raccoons. I got to manipulate babies he was deworming (preventative). Awesome. The videos of his raccoons at home were great.

  • @nancycronin551
    @nancycronin551 21 день назад

    I live in Sac, CA. Lots of raccoons here. I once saw 15-20 subadults of different sizes being led by the 2 largest raccoons along Q St between 11th & 12th. A family lived under the duplex I lived in. They were very chatty and very expressive. I always knew their mood! HAHAHAAA! I had a subadult in my backyard for a few weeks about a year ago. You spend enough time in Sac at night when it's quiet & you'll see raccoons. And recently a baby possum wandered into my home. Bit of a story there but not interesting enough to share. I love raccoons!

  • @Baalek1
    @Baalek1 Месяц назад +31

    I have a glass sliding door near my kitchen, and one night i got up and was on my way to get a glass of water when i saw both of my cats transfixed by something on the other side of that door. It was an entire family of raccoons, all pressed up against the glass, peering in at us.

    • @IllustriousCrocoduck
      @IllustriousCrocoduck Месяц назад +4

      Look kids, check out these humans. Sometimes they escape their pen...

  • @laner.845
    @laner.845 2 месяца назад +59

    When I was in combat weather school, there was a resident raccoon at the dorms who was enormous from all the food the trainees fed him. We lovingly called him Fatass and always left him an uncooked hot dog at the end of the Saturday night BBQ for being so patient with all the food smells all night and hanging out on the edge of the woods just barely visible in the fleeting edges of the gazebo lighting.

    • @noah4822
      @noah4822 Месяц назад +8

      you combat... weather?

    • @johnnychopsocky
      @johnnychopsocky Месяц назад

      ​@@noah4822Live through enough storms in Tornado Alley and you'll feel pugilistic towards weather too

    • @jaredragland4707
      @jaredragland4707 Месяц назад

      ​@@noah4822Tornadoes ravaged the Midwest again, just this week, and you ask if the weather has it coming?

  • @simonnicholls5619
    @simonnicholls5619 Месяц назад +1

    We loved our local band of raccoons, which liked to sleep on the driver on our front porch, we gave them all names and our fave was "Stumpy" who had no tail but nevertheless was the fattest raccoon you ever laid eyes on...I'm guessing everyone in the neighbourhood was feeding him out of pity😂😂😂

  • @lancethrustworthy
    @lancethrustworthy 29 дней назад

    Extra points for this one. Well done.

  • @bintheredonethat
    @bintheredonethat 2 месяца назад +22

    One time standing in my parents kitchen I noticed 2 of them sitting on a tree branch about 12 - 15 away and level with the window. They were calmly sitting there and staring straight into the kitchen. I have no doubt they were blatantly casing the joint.

  • @gordonv.cormack3216
    @gordonv.cormack3216 2 месяца назад +78

    I live in southern Ontario, and have grown to be more tolerant of racoons that I once was. There are a couple that live under my neighbours' shed and I don't think I'll bother to tell them. In the past I've encountered racoons when camping -- they knocked my steel, latched cooler on the ground and when I threw a shoe at them they weren't alarmed. When I threw the second shoe and hit one, they wandered off indignantly. Then there was the racoon who had her pups on my fireplace flue. They were kind of cute in a homely sort of way but the pest control person said he had to put them where mom would find them or she would pester me forever looking for them. Then there were the ones that could open my garage door, and then open the garbage cans in the garage and help themselves. An electric garage door opener solved that particular problem. Currently, they don't cause me too much of a problem. Chipmunks dig up my yard, but they are cute. Coyotes howl and wake me up at night but what can you do? Skunks smell bad but only if you threaten them. All in all, I'm OK with the fauna in Ontario. it isn't poisonous and it won't eat you. So what's the problem?

    • @poochiew.9302
      @poochiew.9302 2 месяца назад +2

      What's the problem? They broke into my friend's attic when I was a kid. They got on our roof and brought fleas to my dogs and in turn my cats. The carry roundworms and are vicious.

    • @diwi1942
      @diwi1942 2 месяца назад +3

      Rabies carriers

    • @harveywallbanger3123
      @harveywallbanger3123 2 месяца назад

      Raccoons are riddled with diseases, including infectious roundworm eggs in basically 100% of their feces. I used to remediate "raccoon latrines" in people's attics in a biohazard suit. You're risking your life to breathe the dust from their droppings, and they shed ticks all over the place as they wander around.
      Any omnivorous mammal that does a lot of scavenging is going to be full of parasites and diseases that are dangerous to humans. Even a vulture is less unhealthy to be around than a raccoon.

    • @tech6hutch
      @tech6hutch 2 месяца назад

      @@poochiew.9302 they burned our crops, poisoned our water supply, and brought a plague upon our houses.

    • @richardwallace853
      @richardwallace853 2 месяца назад +8

      The problem is: raccoons are not only not afraid of humans, but seem to hold them in a kind of pitying disdain.

  • @martharunstheworld
    @martharunstheworld Месяц назад

    I remember one time I was walking home past a school yard. I had the distinct feeling I was being watched. I looked over at a few garbage cans in the school yard and there was a huge raccoon sitting on top of one. He looked at me, scowling, as if to say "What are you looking at?" Later, I lived in a house with an apple tree in the backyard. We had a big Chesapeake retriever and one day, we went out to the yard to see why he was barking. There was a whole family of raccoons in the tree eating apples and they were hissing at our dog. We brought him in the house, so they could get down and away.

  • @SidLaw500
    @SidLaw500 Месяц назад

    My favorite animal. Lots of interactions with them. Scrappy, smart, and charming.

  • @bjs301
    @bjs301 2 месяца назад +77

    My mom was an emergency room nurse in the 1960s. She dealt with raccoon attacks more often than you'd think. People loved to keep them as pets, but they definitely ain't good pet material. As bad as raccoons are, things can always be worse. For several years they overtook a camping area we used to frequent. Then the skunks moved in and chased them out.

    • @kuramacon
      @kuramacon 2 месяца назад

      People taking in wild raccoons are definately a problem. A raccoon must be domesticated from birth, and as such only select sanctuaries are even allowed to put any up for adoption.

    • @russellkeeling4387
      @russellkeeling4387 2 месяца назад +8

      I've also seen several different people try to make raccoons pets. They are very cute when they're little but they grow up to be aggressive intelligent animals with no fear of humans. They are filthy animals, not clean like everyone seems to believe.

    • @christopherconard2831
      @christopherconard2831 2 месяца назад +7

      At a campground I stayed at in Indiana the raccoons learned to work with the skunks. Campers would chase away raccoons, even in groups. But they'd flee the area immediately as soon as the first skunk showed up. Sort of skunks as stormtroopers in the initial assault, followed by the trash panda army.
      People were also warned to keep something heavy on top of coolers. They had figured out these were vaults full of tasty treasures. They also learned how to pick the locks some came equipped with.

    • @tjk3430
      @tjk3430 2 месяца назад +1

      @@christopherconard2831 I went out to my yard at night once and stopped to look at the night sky. About 4 feet away was a skunk and it made a startled motion but decided not to spray me after I backed up slowly. I think spraying is a last resort for them.

  • @joshuastrawser9160
    @joshuastrawser9160 2 месяца назад +400

    I've chased raccoons off of a porch far too many times. One decided to get brave once. He stood on his back legs and hissed at me, so I hit him in the head (not too hard) with a broom. Rather than run off, he grabbed the broom and tried to take it from me. He held on tight until I scooted him off the porch and then finally ran off into the night. Stubborn creatures.

    • @sugarskull2392
      @sugarskull2392 2 месяца назад +12

      😂😂😂

    • @Nannaof10
      @Nannaof10 2 месяца назад +11

      😂😂😂

    • @cloudsn
      @cloudsn 2 месяца назад +73

      Omg, once I caught a racoon trying to drag our sealed plastic container of dog food off the back porch and into the woods. So I grabbed a potato and threw it at it. I missed, and the silly thing took the potato and ran away with it.

    • @dalriadajohannsen
      @dalriadajohannsen 2 месяца назад +3

      😂

    • @SplotchTheCatThing
      @SplotchTheCatThing 2 месяца назад +9

      An animal smart enough to be stupid :D

  • @avres13
    @avres13 Месяц назад +1

    Michigander here and I would say I see raccoons almost daily. I have a bit of a compost pile they like

  • @IgniKing
    @IgniKing 21 день назад +1

    I had a racoon hiss at me from a storm drain when I biked past it

  • @blutoactual230
    @blutoactual230 2 месяца назад +22

    My friend Larry had a pet raccoon when we were kids. Larry's uncle Sewell lived with them. One day Sewell, who rode to work with my father, left his lunch pail in my dad's truck and I was tasked with returning it as they lived just down the street. Sewell was sitting in an easy chair with his feet on a hassock. As I was handing the lunch pail to him the raccoon came out from under the couch, stood on its hind legs, grabbed Sewell's big toe in both hands and bit it. Not only was it the most hilarious thing my nine year-old self had seen up to that point, but I learned several choice words that construction workers used...

  • @jenniferdyke3335
    @jenniferdyke3335 2 месяца назад +28

    We once pulled four baby raccoons out of our family room ceiling. Their mother had entered our house via a roof vent and crawled through our walls until she found what she felt was the best location to give birth and raise her babies. I fed the babies until we found a local wildlife rehab place and could take them there to be raised and released. After that, new raccoon-proof roof vents meant we never had trouble with them again (in the house). Later that summer, though, I was in our bedroom when I heard splashing outside our window on the flat roof of our family room. It turned out to be a set of five, young raccoons playing in water from a recent rain. Pretty cute.🦝❤

    • @oscardiggs246
      @oscardiggs246 2 месяца назад +1

      It’s remarkable how much damage trash pandas can do when they get in the attic. We had one get in the same way.

  • @yerocb
    @yerocb 27 дней назад

    I love them. They are also a nuisance.
    There's a family that rotates through our yard every few months. They raised their babies in our neighbor's tree.
    When i was in college, someone at an apartment complex i lived next to had started leaving food out for them. This is a terrible idea. The colony was at least 50. Kind of amazing to see them all gathering to eat, but not good.
    A friend of mine growing up had an issue with the local raccoons washing their food/hands in their in-ground hot tub. His dad started leaving out a shallow pan of water. They got the hint and used that instead. For years.

  • @laurakerschenbaum4079
    @laurakerschenbaum4079 Месяц назад

    Raccoons are ALL OVER California. During College, our window screen was broken. My roommate and I were studying for finals. When I came back from the bathroom 2 minutes later, a raccoon was sitting on my desk eating my bagel! We could not get rid of him. He scampered through the first floor of the dorm, screams from girls followed in his wake--a maintainance guy chased him around with a broom--after an hour and with a full tummy, he trotted out the front door. This was at 10 in the morning. Yes, they are nocturnal, but trust me, where food is involved, they adjust. We had the same family of raccoons swimming in our pool every summer for years. Some are afraid of people, but most are NOT. If you have cats or dogs, keep them well away from raccoons--raccoons will win that fight.

  • @IanWard
    @IanWard Месяц назад +49

    On raccoons being a nuisance: my sister once had a family of raccoons take up residence in her attic of the space between floors (don't remember which) and it became so much of an issue that she told everyone. When she moved work locations, her going away cake was in the shape of a giant racoon head.

  • @LetsSingTheDoomSong
    @LetsSingTheDoomSong Месяц назад +28

    I raised several raccoons throughout my childhood while growing up in the middle of absolute nowhere on a 1200 acre farm. They were hands-down the best pets ive ever had (my crows are a close second. INSANELY awesome animals!) The babies' mother had died and i took them in when their eyes were still closed. I'd wake up in the middle of the night to bottle feed them and get them to go to the bathroom. They were so adorable, intelligent, and mischievous little pricks 😂 (same with my crows). The raccoons would scamper onto my lap and pat all around my face with their velvety hands, and always tried to shove them into my nose, mouth and ears, looking for goodies 😂 They'd purr like cats while napping on my lap by the barn, and they also eventually got along with the farm dogs and cats. The last raccoon I raised, i was in tenth grade and he was the absolute best. I'll NEVER forget getting off the school bus and seeing him passed away further down the driveway. I was in such shock i hoped he was just napping. Turned out my dad accidentally hit him with the tractor. That was the first time I ever experienced true, physically painful heartbreak; I remember feeling as if my heart actually had a gaping hole in it 💔 I was so devestated but tended to never cry in front of family, so I'd hold it in and break down in the shower, and this lasted for months. You experience the pain of death VERY early in life if you grow up on a farm, but this one hit me in a completely different way. I still miss the ever-loving shit out of my "wild" pets, and will always remember them so fondly.

    • @Nphen
      @Nphen Месяц назад +1

      At 20 likes, surrounded by little anecdotes with hundreds of likes, this is possibly the most underrated comment I will have ever tried to highlight. What an amazing yet heart-rending story.

  • @bad-people6510
    @bad-people6510 Месяц назад +1

    Are Raccoons friendly? -Do not attempt to befriend wild animals.
    Where can raccoons be found? -pretty much everywhere.
    Are they as much of a nuisance as American have led me to believe? -No.

  • @CourtnyCosmic
    @CourtnyCosmic Месяц назад

    Native Texan here, I absolutely love and adore raccoons! I’ve raised a few and rehabilitated them too, they are incredibly smart and mischievous but amazing in every way! Like a cat and a monkey put together

  • @Ampelmannchen42
    @Ampelmannchen42 Месяц назад +34

    We live in the forest/woods/bush and have catflaps on the doors. The property is enclosed with fences, so we only get opossums and raccoons for the most part. Over the years, these two species have learned that the flaps lead to food, warmth, and shelter. Because of this, we have also found these creatures happily snoozing on the furniture - beds and couches primarily. It definitely makes for a good bit more cleaning, but they've been "respectful" so far.