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Pretty sure those are yellow bellied marmots (locally, “rock chucks”) and they are indeed “obese ground squirrels,” although they prefer “plus sized.” No need to body shame rodents.Not sure what kind of marmot/obese ground squirrel this is but he was not cooperative posing for me.



@Cabezon They do make Great White bait. We started to see an influx of Great Whites around Monomoy in the late 80s and 90s. One of them was trapped in an inlet on the Cape for a Couple weeks in the 00’s due to entering on a spring tide and had to wait until more water was available to escape. Here’s one from a NH beach last week.When I was growing up in Massachusetts in the 60’s and 70’s, seeing a gray seal was extremely rare. For a while, there was even a $5 bounty on them and they commonly drowned in the nets of fishers. But after they came under the protection of the Marine Mammal Protection Act in 1972, their numbers have exploded. Like gray wolves (…), the genesis of this recovery was immigration of Canadians, specifically gray seals from Sable Island.

Ya gotta luv that Mystic Pizza..Mystic Connecticut (just down the road from Mystic Pizza) wild mammal.


They look even bigger when you are on cross-country skis in deep snow and you happen to encounter one.I have had the pleasure of seeing numerous moose along the river and I'm still amazed how big they are.
They look even bigger when you are on cross-country skis in deep snow and you happen to encounter one.
I’d say scary fast. I saw one a couple of weeks ago cross a channel in front of us and disappear onto an island. I’m not sure I could have grabbed my bear/moose spray in time.They really look big when you are wading and they come out of the bushes and decide to enter the water and come towards you. Did I say fast? They are very FAST!