Surviving Minnesota!

Lol. They get tame here from the blue hairs on the lake feeding them. He looked quite healthy to me. Stories all over town of people feeding fox. My dad feeds a gray fox up at his place. Before that years ago we had a young one steal a prized deer leg from our daschund and they went round and round the blue spruce in the front yard.
I of course don’t know if it had rabies but if I had my say about the animal— I’m with holm they are quite friendly and playful.
 
It is mud everywhere here. There are foot deep tracks going out to the calving pasture, you can barely get a pickup that is in 4 wheel drive into the pasture and getting out is a chore making sure you don't hit a post. We did have out first calf today, a nice bull. Chicks are all doing well.
A lot of the snow has melted and the creek has come up a lot, this week is the first time since beginning of May last year since it has run. Hopefully this means we will have more then 10 inches of moisture this year
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Lol. They get tame here from the blue hairs on the lake feeding them. He looked quite healthy to me. Stories all over town of people feeding fox. My dad feeds a gray fox up at his place. Before that years ago we had a young one steal a prized deer leg from our daschund and they went round and round the blue spruce in the front yard.
I of course don’t know if it had rabies but if I had my say about the animal— I’m with holm they are quite friendly and playful.
I suppose it's like the difference between "city ducks and geese" and "country ducks and geese". City ducks and geese get used to people throwing them chunks of bread, so they're not scared. Our ducks and geese aren't that tame. We're in a rural area - NO ONE feeds foxes, so they are naturally afraid of humans. Any that aren't are presumed rabid and shot. We also just figure any skunk we see has rabies, so we get rid of those, too.
 

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