Chipmunks!

I’ve been able to twice sneak up on a chipmunk in my backyard while he was on the birdfeeder and pet his butt. Watching him turn around, look at me, freeze for one second, then FLY off the birdfeeder isn’t why I do it. I have a thing for chipmunks. I think they are adorable. And it bothers me why so many homeowners with gardens don’t like chipmunks. Many go beyond not liking them; I’ve known some people are convinced the chipmunks in their yard are conspiring against all of their bulbs, lettuce, flowers and shrubs in a strategic effort to completely denude their landscape. These people are convinced that chipmunks lie in wait, watching for daffodil planting time. Once the bulbs are planted, these same folks know — they just KNOW — that these 5 ounce beasts then pounce on the freshly turned soil to devour every last bulb within microseconds. So these people seek to destroy this enemy of their estate by any means possible.
This is all wasted energy and time, in my humble opinion, as well as the authors of Living With Wildlife: How to Enjoy, Cope with, and Protect North America’s Wild Creatures Around Your Home and Theirs. I have personally owned this book for over 15 years, find it incredibly useful, and was very pleased to see we have it in our very own library.
Here are a few reasons why we can all just chill out about chipmunks in our yards:
1. The natural diet of chipmunks consists of acorns, nuts, berries, and seeds. They readily climb up on birdfeeders
2. Most chipmunks find the taste of daffodil bulbs yucky and don’t eat them.
3. I guess chipmunks may go after crocus or hyacinth, but I’ve got lots of them in my yard and lots of chipmunks and have had zero problems.
4. Chipmunks prefer to live in brush or wood piles, or will burrow underground. The burrows typically do not harm landscape or structures. If you have extensive burrows in your yard you probably have moles which are not NEARLY as cute.
5. Chipmunks are not as prolific as a lot of people think. Chips have 2 litters of 4-5 babies per year. Compare that to mice (8 litters of 4-7 babies/year) or voles (10 litters of 4-5/year), and it’s not so bad.
And really, let’s keep this all in perspective. This book was put out by the California Center for Wildlife, so there are sections on living peacefully with bears, mountain lions and moose. At least we aren’t fighting those out of our Cleveland yards, right?





By Rose Egelhoff
By Anu Thakur


It is this seriousness that causes me to enjoy Slug Bread and Beheaded Thistles: Amusing and Useful Techniques for Nontoxic Housekeeping and Gardening by Ellen Sandbeck. First: Great title. Second, she is so fun to read. Some of her claims seem outlandish, but here are a few tidbits that I would like to prove/disprove. Has anyone tried any of these?
Did you know we have a FANTASTIC rare book room in our library? It is currently not accesible to the general public and I consider it a little perk of working here when I get to rummage through the shelves in it. I recently asked our librarian, Gary Esmonde, if he could write on one of these treasures. Gary, take it away:
talents to faithful and artistic reproductions of plants and flowers. One of the finest examples was Floral Belles From The Green-House And Garden, Painted From Nature by Clarissa Badger. This embossed parlor book (note from Renata: How cool is the inside cover of this book?!) was published in 1867 and features 16 exquisite hand-colored lithographed plates accompanied by poetry. As described by horticultural writer Jack Kramer in his book Women Of Flowers the plates are valued for their complex colors and exceptional shading. These hand-colored plates were executed in an era when chromolithography was fast replacing hand coloring, making these plates all the more valuable. Clarissa Badger’s work is considered a milestone in American botanical art of the period. The
2812.