Otto is getting bigger every day...so is his grip! I have been doing some bare handed wrestling with him...but no more. Ouch!!! Tonight I decided to do the heavy duty glove approach. My hands are now safe from those teeth of his and he seems to not mind my new mittens at all. Lots of happy Otter vocalising and lots of wrestling fun tonight. He seems now to be getting playfully stuck in a lot more, and due to the gloves my hands are feeling a lot better for it.
As usual for this time of year, the wind and rain is relentless. I usually have to wear my waterproofs but tonight there has been no rain. Hallelujah!!!
Young Otters, like most young animals, have the need to bond with their Mother and Siblings. Sadly Otto has neither. A lot of bonding is done during play. I am now Otto's Mum, so I play with him as much as possible...A playful Otter is a happy Otter.
Innes got Otto some fresh Octopus today, so I will try him out with some of Coll's freshest calamari tomorrow... photos to follow.
No sign yet of using his new pool...may have to re-think things...Hmmmm.
Saturday, 8 December 2012
Monday, 3 December 2012
Otter Watersports
Last night my friend Milly came round. He had spotted an old plastic watertank, and thought it would make a good beginners swimming pool for Otto. We went to have a look at it and it was indeed ideal. It had been cut down to about 2 feet high...perfect! By the time we got it back it was dark, so it had to wait till the morning.
A few days earlier Myself, Milly and Peter moved a large shellfish transporter container round to the enclosure. The idea came from Innes, who suggested I take it home for Otto to learn to swim in. It's pretty big and I havent quite worked out yet how to set it up. An extra section, extension will probably have to be added to the existing enclosure. Finding this new water tank is brilliant because it means Otto can get into his watersports right away. Nice one Milly!
I gave it a good clean, fitted an open/close valve to it (for emptying the water) and carefully man handled it over the wire netting of the run. Once it was steady and level enough I filled it with about 30cm of water, bucketed from the adjacent freshwater burn. There was some heavy rain last night so the burn was in full flow.I piled some rocks up on the outside of it for Otto to get in, and done the same on the inside for him to get back out. I only filled it with 30cm of water so he can get used to it. Once he is confident, I will fill it up. Think I need to get myself a length of hose and a water pump...so much easier than going back and forth with buckets.
Just need to wait now and see if he uses it. I've not seen Otto in water before so hopefully I'll get some decent photographs when he decides to dive in.
This evening Otto has been as playful as ever. I gave him his supper, a Codling, which he completely devoured. After supper, he had a good old play fight with me but showed no real interest in his new swimming pool. I'll check on him again later...
all in good time.
A few days earlier Myself, Milly and Peter moved a large shellfish transporter container round to the enclosure. The idea came from Innes, who suggested I take it home for Otto to learn to swim in. It's pretty big and I havent quite worked out yet how to set it up. An extra section, extension will probably have to be added to the existing enclosure. Finding this new water tank is brilliant because it means Otto can get into his watersports right away. Nice one Milly!
I gave it a good clean, fitted an open/close valve to it (for emptying the water) and carefully man handled it over the wire netting of the run. Once it was steady and level enough I filled it with about 30cm of water, bucketed from the adjacent freshwater burn. There was some heavy rain last night so the burn was in full flow.I piled some rocks up on the outside of it for Otto to get in, and done the same on the inside for him to get back out. I only filled it with 30cm of water so he can get used to it. Once he is confident, I will fill it up. Think I need to get myself a length of hose and a water pump...so much easier than going back and forth with buckets.
Just need to wait now and see if he uses it. I've not seen Otto in water before so hopefully I'll get some decent photographs when he decides to dive in.
This evening Otto has been as playful as ever. I gave him his supper, a Codling, which he completely devoured. After supper, he had a good old play fight with me but showed no real interest in his new swimming pool. I'll check on him again later...
all in good time.
Shellfish transporter container |
Donated by Innes Henderson |
The new learning pool...half a watertank! |
Hope Otto likes it |
Sunday, 2 December 2012
Where Otto lives
Here is a link to where Otto lives. It's a great site so have a good look around.
http://www.visitcoll.co.uk/
http://www.visitcoll.co.uk/
Otto's behaviour so far
Otto spends most of the day in his holt and mostly comes out at night. This is when I interact with Him. Regardless of the weather I spend about an hour with him every night. He likes to wrestle and play with almost anything he can find. Plastic bottles seem to be the toy of choice at the moment. Everything is done on Otto terms. He keeps his holt clean and shits and pees outside...house trained or what! He uses the rocky side to the left of the holt for this and uses the grassier right hand side for eating. Small fish like the Pouting are completely eaten whereas the heads and spines of larger fish are left. Otto is not a pet and will not come out for anyone apart from me. I reckon this is a good thing for when he goes back to the wild...reckon I must be his surrogate mum! Like a puppy, he enjoys rolling around and fighting biting my hands....unlike a puppy, there is no way he will allow me to pick him up. As I said..everything is on Otto terms. He gets fed regularly on a diet of fish with the occasional tin of cat or dog food. I reckon he consumes 2lb of fish per day and is growing very fast indeed. He seems to be showing a great interest in water at the moment, so over the next week I will be setting up a large swimming area for him...more on that later. Tried him with a crab last week but he didn't seem to know what to do with it. Will try again this week.
The idea is to eventually let him out to investigate the nearby bay and the burn that leads to the Mill lochs. Hopefully he will by this time trust me enough to accompany him on his foraging expeditions. Because he is so young, it is imperative that he returns to the Holt. Young Otters stay with their mothers for well over a year before becoming independent.
Will write some more soon.
Cheers for now.
The idea is to eventually let him out to investigate the nearby bay and the burn that leads to the Mill lochs. Hopefully he will by this time trust me enough to accompany him on his foraging expeditions. Because he is so young, it is imperative that he returns to the Holt. Young Otters stay with their mothers for well over a year before becoming independent.
Will write some more soon.
Cheers for now.
What age is Otto?
At the end of October when Otto made himself known to me, he had already been weaned. Weaning age for the European Otter (lutra lutra) is around 10 weeks. Peter and I reckon when we got Otto he was about 3 months old. That makes Him as from today roughly 4 months old. Here he is a couple of days ago munching into some cat food.
say cheese! |
Meaowww!!! |
Moving Day
Bananas? Otto in the old chest, just before we moved it. |
nearly there, gotta make a better door. |
sniff sniff |
What you looking at? |
Moving Otto into his new home would take two people. My friend David
agreed to help. In the morning David arrived and we moved Otto. It was
easier than I first thought. I simply waited for Otto to go into his
wooden chest then proceded to tape up the entrance using the original
piece that was cut out. When Otto was secure, we lifted an end each and
carried the chest round to the enclosure. Once in the enclosure I
untaped the blocked hole. Otto came straight out and had a sniff around. After a
good sniff Otto went under the raised holt and stayed there for a
while. It wasn't long before the little Otter found the entrance to the
holt. Many thanks for your help David, much appreciated
Only the freshest fish
A day after Otto got here I managed to source a regular supply of fresh fish. 2 local fishermen have been kind enough to supply Otto with an endless supply of the smelly stuff. Otto gets the fish straight out the sea and I have a mountain of it in the freezer.See photos for a look at Otto's finest. Many thanks to Innes and Kenny for taking the time out to do this...Cheers!!!
November 2012
Three Bearded Rockling |
Wrasse |
Codling |
Pouting |
Dinner time |
Heading for cover |
munch munch! |
crunch crunch |
Building the Otto enclosure
For the next few days Peter and I built Otto a large run. I also spent some time building Otto a place to chill out and sleep in. I made his holt out of old timber that was in the shed and insulated it to keep Otto warm. I also weatherproofed it against the elements. I collected large stones from a fallen down drystone wall and put them in the enclosure. Some were used to try and stop Otto digging his way under and out of the enclosure. Others were positioned near and around the holt to give the whole thing a more natural feel. The holt was raised off the ground incase of flooding. An old palet was used for this.
After days of sawing, nailing, screwing,bashing and hammering, it was now time for Otto to leave the porch and move into its new home.
November 2012
By night |
By Day |
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