The rise of the urban fox has made it easier to study their behaviour

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Foxes have suffered a poor press throughout history and often the loudest complaints seem to come from people living in towns and cities where population densities mean tensions get high. Occasionally the clashes intensify. I remember a case where two children were tragically hurt by a fox as they slept in their beds. Although the attack was shockingly sad, it is important to remember that attacks on humans are very rare. People seem to forget that foxes are wild animals and a vixen with cubs is under a lot of pressure to provide food for her family. In the case of the attack on these children, it was possible that the fox vixen heard the children crying, which to her would have signaled a distress call. Distress calls from any mammal or bird attract predators. They come running thinking they are potentially going to get an easy meal. I often imitate a rabbit squeal to trick foxes to come close to me so that I can photograph them for my paintings. This fox was probably used to sneaking in and out of houses, pinching cat food or being fed by well-wishing neighbours, who think it fun to have a fox in the house.

Fox Cub, painted by Robert E Fuller

Just before the news of that particular story broke I remember talking to an elderly man from London who phoned me to order some greetings cards featuring one of my fox paintings. While he was giving me his details he told me that two foxes had just wandered through his patio doors into his living room. One curled up on the carpet in a shaft of sunlight and the other one came to him as he sat in his arm chair for a dog biscuit. This man lived alone and was largely housebound. The foxes were company for him and clearly gave him so much pleasure.

The inevitable clashes between human and fox highlight the fact that, at the end of the day, these are wild animals and not pets. As a wildlife artist, I have always been fascinated by the sight of a fox slinking through the countryside. They are essentially elusive, which is part of their appeal. But truly wild foxes are virtually impossible to study at close quarters. One slight whiff of human scent, or click of a camera, and they’re off. To make the task more challenging still, the vixen regularly moves her cubs if she is disturbed.

Briar Fox, painted by Robert E Fuller

In contrast urban foxes have become startlingly bold. A couple of years ago a friend of mine called to say that his friend’s daughter had fox cubs under a workshop in her garden in Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire. This lady was due to set off on holiday with her family in a few days time. “Can you come tomorrow?” she asked as I spoke to her on the telephone for the first time. In spite of the fact that I had never met her, she decided that I could stay in her house whilst she was away on holiday, which was exceptionally generous-spirited of her. I wouldn’t be studying wild foxes of course, but it would be the next best thing. Town foxes are used to human scent and not as camera shy as their country cousins and so, without hesitating, I left my home and gallery in Thixendale and headed for Huntingdon. The family lived in a row of terraced houses, with a long thin garden with a shed at the bottom, where the foxes had their den. Ten metres in front of the shed was a wooden Wendy house, belonging to their twin girls. With a cordless saw, I quickly cut out a new ‘window for the girls’ into the end wall of the Wendy house, and settled down to watch the fox family.

 

Throughout the next week, I photographed them from dawn to dusk, spending up to 16 hours a day squashed into a space designed for toddlers. It gave me a fascinating insight into the lives of foxes. The vixen spent a lot of time grooming her cubs. One day she found a tick inside one of the cub’s ears. She was determined that this tick was coming out, no matter how much fuss the cub made. She pinned the cub down with one paw and nibbled at the tick, occasionally taking a bit of fluff off by mistake. The cub protested much in the same way that my own daughter does when she has her hair brushed. Eventually the tick came out and the vixen loosened her grip on the cub. It retaliated by pulling the vixen’s tail. All the other cubs disappeared for safety under the shed, for fear that they would be the next victim of the ‘nit nurse’.

Three’s Trouble, art print by Robert E Fuller

 

Moments like these would have been so difficult to witness in country foxes. The vixen’s diet was also much more varied that I expected. She was particularly partial to adult blackbirds, sparrows and collared doves. I was surprised to discover that she was fast enough to catch these flighty birds. In fact she was hunting more like a cat and when, during my stay, I heard the neighbours complaining that a cat was pilfering pet rabbits in the area I suspected the vixen as the more likely culprit. One evening a very fat, black cat sauntered by and looked, with what could only be described as disdain, under the shed at the fox den. No doubt it was sick of getting the blame!

One day, I moved an old fencing panel that was on the ground near the Wendy house and noticed some mice runs underneath it. The vixen quickly cottoned onto them too and soon followed the scent to a nest of pink baby mice. She caught the mice one by one and offered them to her cubs, but I think they were too full of rabbit. So the vixen stashed them, digging a little hole for each mouse and burying it like a squirrel would do with a nut. Later that evening, she excavated the mice and offered them up as supper to the delighted cubs.

Most evenings, when it became too dark to photograph I would unfurl myself from the cramped Wendy house and walk down to the river which was a couple of streets away. Often I would spot the vixen doing her rounds, navigating busy roads and people walking dogs. She knew the territory well and took shortcuts across gardens so that she always beat me home. It was fascinating to discover that she had a routine you could set your clock to. In that week I saw and learnt more about foxes than in lifetime of watching them in the countryside.

Urban foxes have to face up to very different pressures than their country cousins: they need to learn to negotiate busy main roads and have adapted their diets to suit. But, so far, they’ve never have a gun pointed at them. After the latest uproar this might be set to change. Personally I suspect, however, love them or loathe it; the wily fox is here to stay.

Fox at Dawn, framed art print by Robert E Fuller

 

 

 



Comments

2 Responses

Leave a Reply

Read More

None found