I can thank Kenneth Grahame's wonderful children's book 'Wind in the Willows' for setting me off, early on in life, with a relatively fond view of rats, because my favourite character in that captivating book was Ratty. Good old Ratty, he was the sensible, hospitable one, although he did let fools know what he thought of them. (In descending order I liked Badger next, then Mole, but I could barely tolerate acknowledging Toad of Toad Hall as a friend at all, I'm afraid.)
However, I'm not really here to discuss children's lit today, but rather to discuss rats, and rats in backyards in particular. I just thought an image of Ratty and Mole (the classic original image drawn by EH Shepard) rowing on the river would be a much nicer way to start things off.
Ratty: "There is nothing, absolutely nothing so much worth doing as messing around in boats." Apparently, Ratty was a water rat – and there's more on his Australian cousin later on. |
Enough of fond memories of Ratty for the moment... yesterday I had a huge day in the garden simply weeding, and weeding, and doing more weeding then mulching. Cup of tea around 3pm, feet up with a book overlooking the newly laid mulch... and out from the shrubbery prances a young brown rat, exploring the smell-rich mulch, sniffing, pawing at it. At that point I think I twitched a nerve fibre and Amateur Ratty (as I'll call him/her) zotted back into the thicket of gingers in a flash. Why do I think Amateur Ratty was a Brown Rat (Rattus norvegicus)? Well, there are ways to tell rats apart.
The main way to tell a Brown Rat (above) from a Black Rat (below) is the tail length. A Brown Rat's tail isn't as long as its own body... |
What, no other possible contenders? Well, not in Australian suburbia. Any rats you see in city and suburban backyards are almost certainly either introduced Black or Brown Rats. Yes, native Bush Rats do exist, but they stay in our bushland areas, in dense forests in fact. They are nocturnal creatures for starters, so if you see a rat in broad daylight in your garden, it's very unlikely it's a Bush Rat, even if you live near bushland. In gardens, you could see either Black or Brown rats, but inside houses any rats you see are most likely to be Black rats, which like being indoors much more than Brown Rats do. The Australian Museum has some great fact sheets on rats, if you're interested. Here's the one on Brown Rats, and the one on Black Rats.
Now, as it happens, one native rat is fairly regularly seen in Sydney, and it's this person pictured below, the Water Rat, Hydromys chrysogaster. Sydney Harbour and its foreshores is where you see them, and they're wonderful creatures.
For starters, these are whoppers compared to Black or Brown rats, much bigger. They also have that white tip on their tail, and they have webbed feet at the rear. |
This is who so many nature-loving Aussie gardeners secretly wish is visiting their backyards – the native Bush Rat, Rattus fuscipes. A shy person of nocturnal habits, it would never dare go near a house. You can read more about it from the Australian Museum website listing on it, from which I 'borrowed' this photo, you might also notice. There is a pilot project in suburban Mosman in Sydney to re-release bush rats into bushland there, so I guess you could say there are Bush Rats in Sydney, but most likely not in your garden. |
I prefer it that my rats go boating with their friends, actually, but rats are just another creature visiting our garden, and no matter where you live in urban areas worldwide there's a probably a rat that regularly visits your backyard, whether you like it or not.
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ReplyDeleteWe had rats in our garden a few years back. The advice was to remove bird food before dark but no one told the rats who covorted on the lawn in the middle of the day. We resorted to rat poison as rats are a real problem here. Having said that I havent seen one since we got the cat apart from the one she brought back as a trophy!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks Jamie. It certainly makes me feel better, knowing that I am probably feeding a native rat (albeit with non-native food) rather than an introduced species. Fantastic post.
ReplyDeleteGoodness - Jamie, I LOVE your blog! I discovered it just today, and it's such a pleasure to read and peruse. (Incidentally, 'Wind in the Willows' is still my favorite book.) I'm going to have great fun reading your many past posts... Many thanks for sharing!
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