I killed a woodchuck today.
I don’t mean to be trite and predictable, I know that
wrestling with and coming to terms with animal pests and life and death and
food and one’s part in it all is pretty standard territory for neophyte
farmer-writer types.
Possibly because it is traumatic and shakes up a lot of the
smug assumptions that one is only doing good by hoeing beans and harvesting
tomatoes for the kind local people who buy our veggies.
If they weren’t eating food that needs to be sold in order
for the farm to remain operational and solvent, I would have no problem with
the animals. But, they are. Whole plantings have not yet been lost to the
woodchucks, but we are losing more that anyone would like after the investment
of hours and labor and CSA members’ faith in our abilities. By virtue of my
opposable thumbs, large brain, and upright posture do I also have the utter
right to dominion over this landscape? Do my needs for survival—a paycheck and
food—supercede the rights of the woodchuck clan?
I am not quite sure. It seems arrogant to say yes, and
self-denyingly stupid to say no.
Yesterday, using my thumbs and curious, capable mind, I put
a rotting tomato in the very large Havaheart trap and set it up outside one of
the woodchuck holes. This afternoon, I found a woodchuck in the trap. It was
shaking with fear and its nose was bloody from bashing against the door of the
cage.
I don’t know who designed the Havaheart trap, but I gravely doubt
the actual size and scope of their heart. For most of the unwanted
animals—mice, rats, chipmunks and woodchucks—that I can think of people
trapping, carrying the caged animal to another location and releasing them,
alive, doesn’t really solve the issue. The animal could well be so traumatized
by the experience that, like a deer almost hit on the road, it’ll stumble off
and die of stress, possible more traumatically than a quick snap of the spinal
cord from a traditional mousetrap. If you drive the cage far from the catch sight, there are other troubles.
I know pet cats and dogs who get carsick and I can’t imagine that automotive
travel is an experience that most groundhogs would enjoy, either. Or, let’s say your
trapped mouse lives through its ordeal. It will come back to dine again in your
pantry, leaving you with the same problem you started with. The Havaheart idea
seems to embrace a certain NIMBY/ “out of sight, out of mind” mentality that irks me
with its ease, with its lack of ethics to be questioned and answered for and
cleaved to.
Through the years, I have killed more mice than I can count. Pest killing is something that I feel somewhat obligated to do personally when and where the need arises. If my way
of being in the world requires the death of another being, I’d like to make myself aware of
the death. It seems, to me, to be the responsible, mindful and empathetic thing
to do. I don’t like to insulate myself from the unpleasantness of the hard or
dirty work. I feel dishonest. A
quick death seems like the most practical, ethical and the kindest way to deal
with unwanted varmints.
However, at the farm, there are no firearms to be discharged
(even if that were in keeping with the land use agreement with the Park
Service), and we certainly don’t want to poison a woodchuck, only to have the
poison leach into the ecosystem we grow organic food in as the creature
decomposes. Neither could we figure out how to slit the throat of the squirming
and terrified caged woodchuck. And we could let it out in a tub and then bean
it with a shovel or something, but that seems like it could quickly go wrong.
Which pretty much leaves drowning. While the other farmers
filled up the biggest receptacle we could find with water, I put on thick rubber gloves so
as not to get bitten and walked down to the field to bring in the cage and
critter.
While I’m disturbingly capable at killing pests, I don’t
enjoy it. I feel terrible, in fact. The bigger and more charismatic the animal,
the worse my moral compass and imagination spins. And, if they aren’t munching
on your beets, woodchucks are pretty cute. They look like little beavers,
without the paddle-tail. And I was on my way to end the life of one of these
chaps, simply because it was trying to live its life on the same patch of land
where I am trying to live mine. Really, does my humanness trump their
woodchuckness? In all reality, they cause less damage to the world than I do.
Their carbon footprint is admirably small, they are very family oriented and community
involved, they provide their own housing using only green technologies, require
no electricity or fossil fuels, and they certainly do seem to eat predominantly local, organic
food grown by well-treated workers.
As I was heading down to the field, thinking thick and self-hating thoughts, a ragged V of Canada
Geese took off from the neighbor’s mown-down sunflower field. They flew over
the beets, over the caged woodchuck, and then wheeled off towards the
backfields.
Every time I hear a goose honk, I hear Mary Oliver’s voice,
an echo announcing my place in the family of things.
Thankfully, today was no different.
I don’t believe in Destiny or fate or coincidence or karma. I do
believe in finding peace in reality, in whatever meaning you can derive from
the randomness of the world, whatever faith sustaining comfort comes from
interpreting the circumstances before your eyes and fingertips. So, yes, it was
just the geese's time to take off and there were probably better sunflower seeds
available the next field over. Their presence was not a natural-world
sanctioning of the murder I was about to commit. Nor was it a fleeing censure, or a thing with feathers abandoning me because of my earthbound inhumanity.
It was just geese being geese, playing their part in the
family of things.
And reminding me of my own. That I have as much right to
life as a woodchuck, as a goose.
That we all do, and that the trade for our lives is often
the death of something else beautiful, something else just as worthy of life,
that the family of things is a constantly shuffling deck of cards.
Certainly, it helps to have opposable thumbs for much of this
shuffling and reshuffling. Which is why I actively participate in the killing
of mice and woodchucks. I want to take responsibility for my power in this world. I do not see the cost of so much of my life. I do not
see or know the lives of people mining the heavy metals inside my computer, or
know what terror it is to live wherever my gasoline comes from, to be almost
the last of my species as my habitat and homeland is violently removed, or any of the
rest of little distant murders our lives and lifestyles beget.
The woodchuck hyperventilated and scurried around its cage
as I carried it to the waiting tub and the ambivalent and practical farmers. The heft felt like taking an angry cat to the
vet. Because I’ve read a thousand and one books with talking, sentient animals,
I muttered an apology as we walked along. I thought of my dog, if there is some
animal telepathy that would let him know I killed something cute and furry,
much like himself.
I do not think that, to the woodchuck, any of this mattered.
But it mattered to me, in trying to be present to what I was doing—ending a
life—in a way that was as respectful and mindful as I could manage. People
often say of the hard things to just not think about it. That’s like a Havaheart
trap for the mind, I believe. Better to think about it, to be honest and aware
and present, and if it is awful, question why and learn from it and go forward
cleanly and clearly.
It was terrifically unpleasant to sink the trap into the
water, to watch the woodchuck try to paddle about in the cage, clawing at the
water and helplessly tipping its bloody nose towards the surface. I saw its
eyes roll back and go white, I saw its claws drop its grip on the cage. I saw
it go still.
And then I reached in, hauled out the cage, and took it to
the woods. For the ease of whoever is next in the food web, I threw it
as far into the woods as I could. Something will find it, eat it, and life will
go on, as it always does. Matter is neither created nor destroyed—we each just
borrow it for the duration of our lives. I'd like to live ever more respectfully, joyfully and uniquely with the eternal molecules I'm borrowing and being.
But something has shifted with me. I am more aware now of
the cost of what we do, of the responsibility that comes with being the human,
having the thumbs. I want more and more to minimize the devastations I
participate in, although I understand I am not a ghost and harm to others will
ripple out from my life, by the very nature of life. Even small friendly
organic farms require the deaths of other beings. We have a place within the webs and chains and systems of the world—we are none of us separate or above.
After the killing, I went to the flower field and picked a
large bouquet of riotously wonderful flowers. Because life goes on and if I am going to be present for the
unpleasantness, mindful of the cost of my own life, then I am going to be
eternally certain to be willfully attuned to the good and
beautiful parts of this same life of mine.
They are splendid and infinite. In truth, I see the light
more clearly when I am awake to the darkness, of life when I look death
squarely in its scared little eyes and know my place in the family of things.
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