Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 21, 1955
The Plight of an Unsuspecting
Mouse
By Beatrice E. Willard, Ranger Naturalist, 1953
Sketch by Ardis Hamilton, Telephone
Operator, 1953

On day in late June, when I was near
the South Entrance to Crater Lake National Park, I chanced to spy a beer
bottle near the road. As I picked it up to dispose of it, something in
the neck drew my attention. Closer inspection revealed the skull and
forepaws of a white-footed mouse, and through the brown glass the
hindquarters of this unfortunate rodent were dimly visible.
We can only suppose that this
unsuspecting creature entered the discarded beer bottle, flung to the
side of the road by an unthinking person, and became inextricably lodged
in the neck while attempting to leave. Whether or not he imbibed the
remaining contents is questionable, but the smell may have done its
share in luring him to his doom.
The moral of this story is clear --
someone not only contributed to the marring of the natural beauty of the
roadside, but also lured one of the native animals into a fatal venture.
"Let no one say, and say it
to your shame,
That all was beauty here until you came."