History lesson alert! The UK house-building boom of the early 1930s was really important in creating what we now recognise as ‘the suburbs’. This episode looks back at how it happened and how it inadvertently gave rise to the urban fox population.
Creating a podcast about deterring foxes is very much a step into the unknown, so I hope there are a few of you out there who find this useful. In this introductory episode, I explain how I first came across urban foxes and what prompted me to create this website. Let’s see what happens!
J. David Henry spent over a decade studying rural foxes in Saskatchewan, Canada and wrote an enthusiastic book, Red Fox: The Catlike Canine, all about his incredibly in depth field experiments.
Though he can’t help but sneak in a few references to his studies, How To Spot A Fox is a much more straightforward manual for how to find foxes in rural areas. If you’re looking for a guide to finding foxes in urban areas, you need to look elsewhere.
In many cases, this book is also North American specific with frequent references to fox behaviour in relation to coyotes, wolves and bob cats, animals that we don’t have in the UK.
That being said, Dr Henry does offer some useful information that is helpful in finding and identifying foxes in any habitat, including things like:
FOX PAW PRINTS – Some good pictures of fox footprints and the revelation that fox tracks are almost single file (like cats), whereas a dog’s paw prints are double-file. Useful information in identifying if you’re on the trail of a fox or not.
FOX ENTRY POINT – A great tip if you’re wondering where foxes come into your garden is to pour water on the ground in an area you suspect the fox enters. Make the ground muddy and then check it a couple of days later for paw prints. Use gloves to minimise your scent.
FOX POO – Fox poo is generally 6.4cm (2.5″) long and quite slender. Because they eat whatever they can find, their poo will often contain hair and bone fragments, unlike domestic dogs or cats.
FOX URINE – It smells ‘skunky’, is an amber colour and is seen in very small quantities. If you see a large quantity of urine, it’s very unlikely to be from a fox. As it’s often difficult to spot the gender of a fox, looking at their urine marks or seeing a fox urinating is a good way to tell. Urine released in front of the hind legs is a male, urine released behind the hind legs is a female.
Just like J David Henry’s other work, How To Spot A Fox contains excellent and thoroughly-studied information regarding the world of red foxes.
His knowledge of all aspects of fox life like how they find and build dens, how they interact with other foxes, what they heat and how they cache food is absolutely fascinating. It’s the kind of information that only someone who has dedicated a large proportion of their life to foxes could provide.
Even if you don’t live in rural Canada, How To Spot A Fox is a great read, packed full of facts and you’ll be far more knowledgeable about foxes by the end than you were at the start!
There are times when someone’s passion for a particular topic can actually be more interesting than the thing they are talking about. This is definitely the case when reading Dr J David Henry’s book, Red Fox: The Catlike Canine.
From the early 1970s to the mid 1980s, boreal ecologist Dr Henry spent 14 years researching rural red foxes in Prince Albert National Park, Saskatchewan, Canada. This book recounts his incredibly in-depth experiments, which could be a bit of a tough read if they were relayed purely in scientific language.
Fortunately for the reader however, Henry injects some much-needed humility, good nature and humour into proceedings, resulting in a thoroughly entertaining and action-packed 8 chapters. When you read the lengths Dr Henry went to in order to get his results (e.g. watching foxes bury food over 500 times), you’ll realise that he needed every inch of his good humour to get through some very trying times.
Originally, Dr Henry was at Prince Albert National Park to work on a black bear management project, but became so captivated by the foxes, that he decided to research them instead, forming the basis of a PhD. His passion for the foxes is clear, as evidenced in the names he gives to the foxes he observes.
‘Rose’ is described as doing something the author had never seen a fox do. Pretending to sleep while waiting outside a mouse hole, suddenly springing into life after lulling the mouse into a false sense of security.
‘My Friend’ was a male fox that Henry spent time running after in the forest. He said it actually took him about a month before he was physically fit enough to keep up. Due to the lack of human contact in the forest, the fox was perfectly happy to be followed without being alarmed.
Another nice human touch is Henry’s description of laying out red fox and coyote bones on his kitchen table trying to work out bone densities. He describes the tedious process as ‘corporal punishment’ with his (very understanding) wife laughing at him cursing in frustration!
Putting the entertaining qualities of the book to one side, J David Henry does come up with some very useful findings as a result of his painstaking research.
His observation that foxes are very ‘catlike’, despite being part of the Canid family is particularly interesting and not something I’d considered before reading his book. The retractable claws, vertical slit pupils, tapetum lacidum (shiny ‘cats eye’) and sharp canines are just some of the physical attributes shared with cats.
When hunting, foxes also exhibit very feline characteristics. Foxes like to stealthily creep up quietly on their prey, belly down just like cats. They’ll also opt for a one bite kill as cats do, rather than the shaking technique usually employed by dogs.
The cat comparison really helps to explain why foxes are such successful hunters and able to adapt to virtually any environment they find themselves in.
Overall this is a fascinating study of rural foxes, carried out by a humane and intelligent man who is unswervingly passionate about his subject.
Dr J David Henry successfully walks the line between scientific and entertaining and this book is definitely recommended for anyone who wants to learn more about foxes.
It’s also a great look behind the curtain to see the amount of hard work that goes into studying nature, as well as the immense satisfaction you get from doing it.
My advice is: go out and waste a lot of time carefully observing your animals. You may be surprised at the insights you discover. You may be surprised at the undiscovered richness of wildlife societies. Simply observing wildlife in it’s natural habitat can [help with] the understanding, interpretation, and conservation of wildlife, the animals with whom we share this planet.