Car Strikes Baby Mink on Wahackme, Breaking Its Back

Officials put down a baby mink last week after a car on Wahackme Road ran over the animal, breaking its back. The call came in at 8:30 a.m. on Aug. 7 as an injured ferret on the corner of Wahackme at Bayberry Road, but turned out to be a mink—a carnivorous species that exists in New Canaan though it is not often seen, said Animal Control Officer Maryann Kleinschmitt. “I had never seen one [before],” Kleinschmitt said. “I know that we have fisher cats and weasels out there, but I’ve never seen a mink.

‘Reptile’ Spotted in Mill Pond

Police last week responded to a report of a “reptile” spotted in Mill Pond, officials say. The nanny of a New Canaan family on July 29 said she’d seen a scaly creature enter the pond, according to a police report, possibly an alligator or caiman, according to a police report. While Animal Control Officer Maryann Kleinschmitt said she’s not dismissing the idea of an illegally held reptile being released into the water—“People can put strange things in waterways,” she said—what is more likely is that what the eyewitness saw is what’s known as an ‘alligator turtle.’

Typically found in the southeast, the creatures are scaly and have spikes on their backs, and though they’re a different species from the snapping turtles New Canaanites would know, their mating season is similar (meaning the females could be leaving fresh water now to waddle to a nest and back). “We usually see soft shell snapping turtles here, but if she saw this long-neck alligator turtle with scales, then it easily could be mistaken for another type of reptile,” Kleinschmitt said. Alligator turtles have been reported in New Canaan in the past, Kleinschmitt said, “usually on people’s private property.”

Though Kleinschmitt herself hasn’t seen one in New Canaan, the reptile was seen on a pond off of Toby’s Lane, she said.

Four Incidents of Bats in New Canaan Homes

Twice last week, bats that had been flying inside homes in New Canaan were released by residents before officials could capture, euthanize and test the mammals for rabies—meaning those individuals now must consult their physicians about whether to undergo a series of rabies shots. The Wednesday incidents—one on Oenoke Ridge Road and the other on Old Norwalk Road—are the latest in a flurry of bat-related calls fielded by the New Canaan Police Department’s Animal Control unit during what is the mammals’ high season. “This time of year, from the end of June and to September, the female bats are giving birth to babies and they kick the males out of the nest,” Officer Maryann Kleinschmitt said. “So they [the males] will go into the first open door or chimney they see. If a bat goes into a house, because rabies can be transmitted from saliva, even if it falls onto a piece of furniture, it is considered contact.”

Other recent bat calls include 3:27 p.m. on July 22 on Thayer Pond Road and 9:30 a.m. on July 27 on Valley Road, according to police reports.

Chihuahua Roaming on Carter Street Is Up for Adoption; Serial Escapee Lab Strikes Again

A brindle Chihuahua found roaming on Carter Street last week is up for adoption at the New Canaan Police Department’s Animal Control shelter, officials say. Now called ‘Randy,’ the little dog was “running all over the place” and finally was secured by three or four officers at about 8:40 a.m. on July 23, said Officer Maryann Kleinschmitt. No one has come forward to claim the dog despite the unit’s efforts to locate an owner—Randy had no collar or microchip. He’s a small-size Chihuahua mix, about three years old, “with a big personality,” says a flier fro Randy. “This little guy is quite a goofy boy once you get to know him, who enjoys nothing more than lots of loving and long walks,” she said.

Headless Rabbit Turns Up on Heritage Hill Road

Police believe it was wild animals—and not a human, as in a pair of cases last year—that decapitated a rabbit whose carcass was found in New Canaan last week. At about 7:40 a.m. on July 23, police received a report of a rabbit found on Heritage Hill Road whose head and leg both had been removed. Because of two disturbing discoveries last year—when a decapitated cat was discovered around Halloween and then, two weeks later, a rabbit turned up with its head clearly chopped off with a knife (that was on Pepper Lane)—Animal Control investigated the new case, Officer Maryann Kleinschmitt said. “This one was a wild rabbit and it was not a clean cut, it was torn apart,” Kleinschmitt said. “My guess is that it was a hawk or raccoon.”