This painting of a fox mousing in the snow is currently on show in my gallery in Thixendale, North Yorkshire.
I spotted this fox as I was driving home late one evening. Dusk was just settling over the snowy landscape when I
saw something moving by a straw stack. I stopped my car just in time to see
a fox slinking round the back of the stack out of sight. It reappeared a hundred yards away, heading towards a long straight
drainage channel on the edge of a field; almost the size of a small canal. I
was all fingers and thumbs getting my camera out.
Meanwhile the fox passed through a hedge and re-appeared on
the bank of the channel. It turned and looked at me in a nonchalant manner
before continuing down the bank. Here it cocked its leg to mark out its
territory. Suddenly it froze, head pointing downwards and ears up. I
guessed it was ‘mousing’ or more likely had heard a vole moving under the snow.
It repositioned its legs, ready to pounce, and pinpointed
the position of its prey before it sprang high up into the air and dove into
the snow, front feet first. Its nose was buried deep in the snow while its thick brush
tail wagged from side to side as it hunted. Then the fox lifted its head back out of the snow, and shook
it. Bits of reed fell from its mouth – it had missed.
It continued onwards and I followed it on foot as it set out
on this night of mischief. I used the hedge as cover to get closer.Wild country foxes are tricky subjects to approach but there
is no harm in trying. By the time I caught up with the wily creature it was
watching a flock of starlings nosily bathing and drinking under a bridge where
the water hadn’t frozen.
Stealthfully, the fox crossed the bridge, but the birds were
far too wise and fast for him. They flew into a nearby willow tree and settled
down to roost. The fox continued on the opposite side of the channel. I
ducked back through the hedge to keep out of sight as I followed. After 100
yards I crept back through and found him on point, looking at the ground again.
This time he was after a mole. The dark soil of the freshly
dug mole hill stood out against the whiteness of the snow. A twig snapped beneath my foot and I froze as the fox looked
my way. Luckily some movement underground refocused its attention. He paused,
repositioned his feet and cocked his head to one side.
By this time it was too dark to take photographs, but I was
enjoying watching. After a tense few minutes, the fox sniffed the molehill, raked
over it with its front paw and then, realising that the mole must have escaped,
cocked its leg peevishly on the molehill. It was as if it was saying: ‘If I
can’t eat you I’ll leave you with this smell instead’.
As the fox trotted off, I decided to try to keep up. But as
I stepped forward my foot cracked noisily on an ice puddle hidden under the
snow. The next footstep made the same sound and I was afraid I had scared off
the fox. Sure enough as I reappeared out of the hedge, it had
vanished. I could see hundreds of yards in each direction but it had outwitted
me.
A silhouette in the distance caught my eye and I checked it
out with my binoculars. It was a roe deer browsing. I was out in the open now
and the deer was quick to spot me and quickly pronked into some cover. I turned to head back and crossed the bridge retracing the
fox’s movements. I soon picked up its fresh tracks and as I approached the
molehill I caught its unmistakably pungent smell.
I crossed the bridge where the starlings had gone to roost.
They were silhouetted against the sky, which was now lit up with stars. It was well below freezing and the snow was developing a
crust. Imprinted into it with perfect precision was the shape left by the fox’s
head where it had pounced for a vole.
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