Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 5, No. 3, September 1932
In Memoriam
By Ranger Naturalist E. L. Clark
Those of you who have visited Crater
Lake National Park and have been a guest at the Lodge will remember
little Oscar, the king of the golden mantled squirrels. Those who have
not met Oscar personally may recall the picture postcard of a little
sophisticated squirrel sitting on its haunches while eating a peanut
that has just been offered by a friend. Oscar for the past two years has
been the chief host at the Lodge, extending to all visitors a happy but
wistful greeting. This spring he was sitting on the snow bank at the
doorstep waiting for the early visitors to call. He prided himself in
being able to tell a nut farther than any other squirrel. Being a
privileged character, he was permitted to maintain both his private
entrances into the hotel, one being near the grand fireplace where it
was always so warm and cozy, and the other being near the postoffice
window.
Many happy hours he spent on the knees
of special friends, eating peanuts to his little heart's content. His
social register for the season included such friends as Captain Steel of
the U. S. S. Saratoga, and Tom French, the famous football official of
the Pacific Coast. It is rumored that the latter devised several reasons
for extending his visit to Crater Lake, but the real reason was to feed
the little monarch peanuts. In this he was duly rewarded when Oscar took
33 peanuts in succession.
These little friends in our national
parks know no fear. They learn to trust everyone, even those who are
leading a dog on a leash. While basking in the warm sunshine on the
front steps of the Lodge, our little Oscar was suddenly seized. He felt
severe pains rush through his tiny body, then he was shaken and
everything became dark. Death had come fast. he never realized what had
happened. Friends who witnessed the tragedy tell of a dog that rushed
down upon the unknowing and unexpecting little monarch, driving the life
from the little body with one vicious crunch of his powerful jaws. The
dog had been carelessly tied to the wheel of an automobile.
In ceremonies befitting the occasion
the remains of the golden mantled squirrel, Oscar, were cremated in the
fireplace that he had learned to love.
Friends, help us protect our wild
animal life.