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by Barry Lopez I'd heard so much good about this place, how the animals were cared for in special exhibits. But when I arrived I saw even prairie dogs had gone crazy in the viewing pits; Javelina had no mud to squat in, to cool down; Otter was exposed on every side, even in his den. Wolf paced like a mustang, tongue lolling and crazy-eyed, unable to see anyone who looked like he did–only Deer, dozing opposite in a chainlink pen. Signs explain the animals are good because they **** animals who like oats or corn too much. Skunk has sprayed himself out, with people rapping on his glass box. Badger's gone to sleep under a red light and children ask if he's dead in there (dreaming of dead silence). And Cougar stares like a clubbed fish into one steel corner all morning, figuring. Only Coyote doesn't seem to care, asleep under a creosote bush, waiting it out. Even the birds are walled up here, held steady in chicken-wire cages for the staring, for souvenir photos. And this, on the bars for Eagle: The bald eagle was taken as a fledgling from a nest in New Mexico by an Indian. He planned on pulling feathers for cer- emonial headdresses every year. The federal government seized the bird and turned it over to the Desert Reserve for safekeeping. Bear walks in his own *** smells concrete and his own **** all day long. He wipes his nose on the wall, trying to **** it. At night when management is gone, only the night watch left, the animals begin keening: now voices of Wood Duck and Turtle, of Kit Fox and everyone else, Bear too, lift up like the bellowing of stars and kick the walls. 14 miles away, in Tucson, are movie houses, cold beers and roads out of town, but they say animals know how to pass the time well enough. And after a few beers they'll be just like Indians– get drunk, fall down and spoil it all.
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Sep 5, 2015
Sep 5, 2015 at 2:20 PM UTC
Desert Reservation
by Barry Lopez I'd heard so much good about this place, how the animals were cared for in special exhibits. But when I arrived I saw even prairie dogs had gone crazy in the viewing pits; Javelina had no mud to squat in, to cool down; Otter was exposed on every side, even in his den. Wolf paced like a mustang, tongue lolling and crazy-eyed, unable to see anyone who looked like he did–only Deer, dozing opposite in a chainlink pen. Signs explain the animals are good because they **** animals who like oats or corn too much. Skunk has sprayed himself out, with people rapping on his glass box. Badger's gone to sleep under a red light and children ask if he's dead in there (dreaming of dead silence). And Cougar stares like a clubbed fish into one steel corner all morning, figuring. Only Coyote doesn't seem to care, asleep under a creosote bush, waiting it out. Even the birds are walled up here, held steady in chicken-wire cages for the staring, for souvenir photos. And this, on the bars for Eagle: The bald eagle was taken as a fledgling from a nest in New Mexico by an Indian. He planned on pulling feathers for cer- emonial headdresses every year. The federal government seized the bird and turned it over to the Desert Reserve for safekeeping. Bear walks in his own *** smells concrete and his own **** all day long. He wipes his nose on the wall, trying to **** it. At night when management is gone, only the night watch left, the animals begin keening: now voices of Wood Duck and Turtle, of Kit Fox and everyone else, Bear too, lift up like the bellowing of stars and kick the walls. 14 miles away, in Tucson, are movie houses, cold beers and roads out of town, but they say animals know how to pass the time well enough. And after a few beers they'll be just like Indians– get drunk, fall down and spoil it all.
mike-essig
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Sep 5, 2015
Sep 5, 2015 at 2:20 PM UTC
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