Muskrat Love: A Lotus leaf for lunch – yes please! #Wordless Wednesday #Muskrat

Wordless Wednesday – allow your photo(s) to tell the story.

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About Linda Schaub

This is my first blog and I enjoy writing each post immensely. I started a walking regimen in 2011 and in 2013 I decided to create a blog as a means of memorializing the people, places and things seen on my daily walks. I have always enjoyed people watching, so my blog is peppered with folks I meet or reflections of characters I have known through the years. Often something piques my interest, or evokes a pleasant memory from my memory bank, so this becomes a “slice o’ life” blog post. I respect and appreciate nature and my interactions with Mother Nature’s gifts is also a common theme. Sometimes the most-ordinary items become fodder for points to ponder over and touch upon. I retired in March 2024 after a career in the legal field. I was a legal secretary for almost 45 years, primarily working in downtown Detroit, then working from my home. I graduated from Wayne State University with a degree in Mass Communications (print journalism) in 1978, though I’ve never worked in that field. I would like to think this blog is the writer in me finally emerging!! Walking and writing have met, shaken hands and the creative juices are flowing in Walkin’, Writin’, Wit & Whimsy. I hope you think so too. - Linda Schaub
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46 Responses to Muskrat Love: A Lotus leaf for lunch – yes please! #Wordless Wednesday #Muskrat

  1. bushboy's avatar bushboy says:

    A lovely fat rat

    Liked by 2 people

  2. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a muskrat in real life.

    Liked by 2 people

  3. Zazzy's avatar Zazzy says:

    I saw one in our back yard in Shell Knob, once. I thought it was a beaver at first until I saw that skinny tail.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Linda Schaub's avatar Linda Schaub says:

      You’re right Zazzy – without seeing the tail, they look alike. I’ve never seen a beaver but I have seen their handiwork at Lake Erie Metropark. I was amazed to see what a beaver’s teeth can do to a tree and they whittle it down so much, I don’t know how it is left standing!

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  4. Anne's avatar Anne says:

    It is interesting for me to see what a muskrt looks like 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

    • Linda Schaub's avatar Linda Schaub says:

      This is only the second one I’ve seen Anne. They resemble a beaver, except muskrats have a skinny tail and the beaver has a wide, flat tail that resembles a paddle. People eat muskrat here – there was a catering place where the owner caught muskrat and prepared meals and they were quite popular!

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  5. dawnkinster's avatar dawnkinster says:

    There are muskrats over in the pond across the road. I saw an osprey carry one off this summer….the osprey was having a hard time flying with it. I think it was a pretty healthy muskrat!

    Liked by 2 people

    • Linda Schaub's avatar Linda Schaub says:

      Wow – that osprey must have been eating its Wheaties to lug that muskrat in its talons! They are chunky! Did you ever see the video of the osprey that got a fish so big, it kept dragging the osprey back into the water? It was amazing footage by a photographer who happened to be standing there – I believe it was in Florida.

      Liked by 1 person

  6. TD's avatar TD says:

    That fella has some mighty big teeth! I would not want him to take a bite of me!! It looks content finding dinner in the water. I’ve never seen on of these critters. Quite interesting.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Linda Schaub's avatar Linda Schaub says:

      Yes, aren’t they big teeth TD? Muskrats look a lot like beavers, except for their long skinny tail. I’ve read somewhere they eat a lot of cattails, so that is why their teeth are so brown. People around these parts used to order muskrat dinners from a local caterer during the Lenten season (they are cold-blooded mammals so that meat was okay to eat during Lent) … they were quite popular at one time, but the business has since closed down.

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  7. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a muskrat in real life… and looking at those teeth, I’m not sure I want to. 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

    • Linda Schaub's avatar Linda Schaub says:

      This is only my second sighting Janis and I agree with you on the teeth. They are huge and the parks like them as they munch on reeds and cattails keeping the shorelines pared down from invasive plants.

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  8. trumstravels's avatar trumstravels says:

    Ah he’s a cutie! I don’t seem them very often. Great pics!

    Liked by 2 people

  9. Wonderful pictures Linda! They are so much fun to sit and watch. We were feeding fish bread with the grandkids a few years ago and a muskrat stole a piece, swam across the stream to store in his den then came back for more. Of course we made sure he had plenty each time he came back. Lol

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    • Linda Schaub's avatar Linda Schaub says:

      That’s funny Diane – a little opportunist! I have no funny stories about muskrats and this is only the second one I’ve ever seen. One was in the Creek at the Park. He was leisurely enjoying his Lotus leaf!

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  10. Rebecca's avatar Rebecca says:

    I love seeing these guys. This is a fun set of photos. 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

    • Linda Schaub's avatar Linda Schaub says:

      I felt lucky to be that close up to this guy Rebecca. He was right near the shoreline and lingering over his Lotus leaf. Glad you enjoyed the photos! 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

      • Rebecca's avatar Rebecca says:

        Sometimes they get so distracted that they forget what’s around them. Those moments make for fun photos.

        Liked by 1 person

      • Linda Schaub's avatar Linda Schaub says:

        Yes, you are right about that Rebecca. Food is a great distraction for any critter it seems. They forget to watch their back for predators. I worry about that with the squirrels at the Park. I try to put the peanuts in a safe place and now, especially, because it is Fall and they want to hide peanuts, they leave that safe place and cross the field to bury a peanut. Yesterday there was a Cooper’s Hawk on the fence and I saw it swoop down behind a tree – I didn’t see anything (thankfully).

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  11. Debbie D.'s avatar Debbie D. says:

    Muskrat love, indeed! 😀 I’ve never seen one close up and your photos have captured him beautifully.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Linda Schaub's avatar Linda Schaub says:

      Thank you Debbie! I was lucky because I saw some ducks along the shoreline and was trying to take pics of them and then this guy surfaced. This is only the second muskrat I’ve ever seen and the other one was paddling down the Creek, its tail streaming out behind it. I had to throw that old song in there for those of us old enough to remember it. 🙂

      Liked by 2 people

  12. AnnMarie stevens's avatar AnnMarie stevens says:

    Miss Linda………………………………………HOW did you ever get a close up picture of a muskrat nibbling on a Lotus leaf??

    Liked by 2 people

  13. Cool muskrat pics, Linda! It kind of looks like a miniature bear, in a way. I wonder how long they live?

    Liked by 2 people

    • Linda Schaub's avatar Linda Schaub says:

      Glad you liked the pics Tom! It’s only the second time I’ve seen a muskrat and I was lucky to see it right at the shoreline at Lake Erie Metropark. It does look like a miniature bear all hunched over like that. It was really enjoying that Lotus leaf. I had to Google to find out the answer to your question Tom and they only live three to four years in Michigan (in the wild; up to 10 years in captivity). I suspect the cold Winters and frozen marshes aren’t contributing to its longevity.

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      • Wow… 3 to 4 years is not very long but measuring our chronological time with their sense of time is not fair. I used to see more of them in past years and — like so many sweet creatures — now they seem to be dwindling in numbers. So cool that you were able to capture one with your camera!

        Liked by 1 person

      • Linda Schaub's avatar Linda Schaub says:

        No, I didn’t think it was long for them to live either Tom and that’s probably due to the harsh Winters. They don’t hibernate, but the article said they have floating lodges like a beaver does or they also have an underwater den. I was excited to see it that day and up so close too,

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  14. J P's avatar J P says:

    I am not sure I have ever actually seen a muskrat before. All I can think of is a variation on the tongue-twister about woodchucks – how much musk could a muskrat rat if a muskrat could rat musk.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Linda Schaub's avatar Linda Schaub says:

      Ha ha – this is the only the second one I’ve seen JP, probably because up until a few years ago, some enterprising fellow who had a catering business, decided to catch and cook muskrats during the Lenten season. He probably depleted half of SE Michigan’s muskrats.

      Since they are cold-water mammals, they are allowed for meals for Catholics during Lent. Never heard of that idea either – it was fish or pancakes on Friday during Lent and I still don’t eat meat on Fridays any time of the year now. Anyway, the idea went over well and Kola’s Kitchen was very busy with their muskrat dinners. No, it never appealed to me.

      Liked by 1 person

  15. Ally Bean's avatar Ally Bean says:

    That’s a muskrat, huh? Not the most handsome creature.

    Liked by 2 people

  16. I’ve never seen a wild muskrat, what a find! He looks like he could be one of my granddaughter’s stuffies. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    • Linda Schaub's avatar Linda Schaub says:

      Another great find for me Barbara – up until this time I had only seen one muskrat swimming down the middle of the Creek and its long tail streaming out behind it and I didn’t even take a photo. So this was a treat – I got close to the shoreline as ducks and/or turtles are always perched on logs and I saw this guy/gal instead. It was plump like a stuffie would be – surely it didn’t get that plump eating lotus leaves!

      Liked by 1 person

  17. This is my first time seeing a muskrat! Wow. What a cutie.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Linda Schaub's avatar Linda Schaub says:

      It’s only my second time seeing one Esther; the last time it was swimming and I never saw its face. They are plump which I didn’t expect. I was thinking they were sleeker.

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