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ACTIVITIES
Elementary, My Dear Walker
Detective Skills
By Stephen Altschuler
In more urban areas, you may also find signs of wild, or domesticated, life, particularly near parks and other
natural areas (or closer to home; raccoons, opossums,
squirrels, and deer visit from time to time). But you can
also play detective in relation to human signs, noticing
things like tire tracks, litter, campfires, cigarette butts,
shoe or footprints, and dog or horseshoe prints. One
nationally known tracker, Tom Brown from New Jersey, author
of The Tracker and The Search, helps law enforcement
agencies find missing people and solve crimes using his
extensive tracking knowledge.
Few of us will ever track a missing person, but you can
figure out things that seem unusual, satisfying your
curiosity and sometimes setting your mind at ease. For example,
noticing the absence of overhead power lines in a particular
neighborhood could help you realize it's part of the power company's
campaign to put lines underground. Or, the overturned trash can in your yard might tell you that a raccoon was at play, not a dog. Why? There's no trash strewn about. A dog would make a total mess, but a raccoon takes its
catch to a secretive place in the brush to search for bits
of food. Tracking, whether in the city or woods, is a
matter of fine-tuning your senses and making sense of it
all.
With wildlife, the ultimate track, according to Ellis,
Tom Brown, and the late Olaus Murie (he was president of the
Wilderness Society and compiled a life list of almost 200
tracks of different species of mammals and birds) is a part of
the animal itself, such as a carcass, skull, bone, or
feather. Animals often retreat to a secluded spot when they
sense they are dying, so bones are not commonly found,
unless the death was catastrophic. I found a coyote skull
once near a stream, perhaps indicating bad water. And
recently I discovered the carcass and bones of a fawn who
had jumped down the steep embankment of a dried creek bed and
got tangled in an old wire fence. I found the fawn's
remains, by the way, by observing a turkey vulture suddenly
fly up in front of me, tipping me off that it was feeding on
nearby prey.
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