Thieves on the Fairway

 

Portland Press Herald

By BETH QUIMBY, Staff Writer May 15, 2008

 

Courtesy Jennifer Soule

Courtesy Jennifer Soule. Two young foxes play Monday afternoon outside the Highland Green Adult Resort Community and Golf Course sales office in Topsham. Foxes have taken up residence at the course.

Tom MacDowell and Bill Fogel thought they were playing a regular round of golf at Portland's Riverside Golf Course last week as they watched MacDowell's ball fall just short of the 14th green.

Then a coyote emerged from the woods, scooped up the ball in its mouth and trotted back to the trees.

"Maybe he collects Nike golf balls," said MacDowell.

MacDowell and other golfers in southern Maine are discovering a hazard that's not usually mentioned in the same breath as woods, water and sand traps.

Dozens of incidents involving ball-stealing critters have been reported on at least three golf courses in southern Maine in the past year.

Wildlife biologists say the motion of a bouncing ball and its resemblance to an egg trigger an animal's instinct to pounce.

Golfers and others say they welcome encounters with nature's golf ball thieves. MacDowell and Fogel said they got a kick out of the incident - and it didn't cost MacDowell any strokes.

Under the rules of golf, if a ball at rest is moved by an "outside agency" -- in this case a coyote -- there is no penalty.

Foxes have taken up residence around the Highland Green Adult Resort Community and Golf Course in Topsham for the past several years. Golf Pro Dan Perry said that last year, one fox often positioned himself at the fifth hole. This spring, he has been spotted staking out the first hole.

"He doesn't bother anybody except to take their golf balls," said Perry.

Highland Green residents who walk the development's trails and open land sometimes discover caches of golf balls left behind by the foxes. Lyn Adams said she was out walking with her husband when they came upon a fox den.

"And sure enough, there were 30 balls buried, covered with leaves and dirt," she said.

Sally VonBenken, who walks the trails around Highland Green as a member of the Cathance River Education Alliance, said she has found piles of neatly stacked golf balls in the woods.

Courtesy Jennifer Soule 

Courtesy Jennifer Soule. Biologists say it is no surprise that foxes would steal golf balls. Foxes love to play, and the balls probably look like eggs to them.

"They are all chewed up," VonBenken said.

Jon Leahy, marketing and sales director at Highland Green, said he didn't believe the stories people told of ball-stealing foxes until he witnessed it himself. He said a fox absconded with one person's ball and then came back and made off with the next shot.

On Monday, Leahy and his office mates watched a fox family cavorting for two hours outside their office.

Golf course officials say they like the furry animals. Roger Densmore, golf pro at Sable Oaks in South Portland, said the foxes keep down the population of groundhogs, the bane of many a fairway.

He said the foxes that live around Sable Oaks are playful and fun to watch.

Last summer, there was a fox family living near the eighth green.

"Every time they heard a commotion, their little heads would pop up," he said.

Wildlife experts say golf courses make good habitat for foxes and coyotes, which feed on the mice, voles and other small animals that frequent the rough.

Christine Maher, an associate professor of biological sciences at the University of Southern Maine, said foxes are famous for creating caches of food.

"I have seen them do that with baby groundhogs," she said.

Maher said the bouncing golf ball triggers the same reaction to pounce in a fox as a toy mouse triggers in cat.

Walter Jakubas, wildlife biologist and mammal group leader at Maine's Department of Island Fisheries and Wildlife, said based on his own experience, ball-stealing is standard behavior for foxes. He said foxes are curious and playful and can grow quickly accustomed to humans.

When he worked on Kodiak Island in the Alaskan wilderness, he saw a fox that was closely following a Frisbee game. Just to see what would happen, Jakubas threw the frisbee toward the fox, which ran away with it.

"I had to track the fox two miles to get the Frisbee back, " he said.

But Jakubas said there is a downside when wild animals become so accustomed to humans that they lose their fear. He pointed to the recent string of coyote attacks on people living in the Los Angeles suburbs as an example.

MacDowell said the coyote who stole his ball at Riverside appeared to have a healthy fear of humans. Either that, or the coyote had quickly learned that golf balls are not particularly tasty.

When MacDowell returned to the 14th hole the next day, he spotted the coyote once again. But this time it left his ball alone.

"He kept his distance," MacDowell said.


Staff Writer Beth Quimby can be contacted at 791-6363 or at:


bquimby@pressherald.com

Copyright © 2008 Blethen Maine Newspapers





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