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Apr 05 2009

The Rare Black Fox

Published by christianna at 8:35 pm under News Edit This

- The Black Fox -

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The National Fox Welfare Society and Fox Rescue UK

Over the years the dwindling numbers of the black fox are mainly due to the capturing and skinning of the creature to create glossy fur coats from their pelts; with fox hunting being another major factor, rendering this beautiful animal very much in danger of becoming extinct. From their extremely scarce sightings, we are led to believe from wildlife experts that there are only a handful of the black varieties of the fox now to be found inhabiting Great Britain.

The fox is a beautiful and sleek creature and at this present point in time, the rarity of the black fox is causing deep concern. There was a time not so long ago when the black fox, as the red fox, was a common sight to be found wandering about the British Isles.

But alas, no more. The black fox is virtually extinct in the UK and sightings of the black fox are extremely rare and very few and far between.

In North America, one in five red foxes are black, because they were introduced from Europe, and the reason they retain their numbers is because they have not been hunted down for their pelts for the making of fur coats to the fur trade; thus keeping the genetic strain safe and sound.

The fox is a member of the canid family, which is akin to coyotes, jackals and wolves. They are, however, very much a separate animal which has their own genetic group. They are basically carnivores, but they do also eat berries and grains. Characteristics of a fox are an extended slim body with long legs, a long snout and a thick and long, fluffy, brush tail. The fox is a swift and agile runner and can reach a speed of 30 mph. Their eyes are small and bright and their ears are alert and triangular. The animal appears inquisitive and is of a stealthy and agile constitution.

The cries from the fox are barking, and an almost scream like howl, and a sound which sounds bird like. Some say a bit like a baby crying. To hear a fox in the dead of night can be quite alarming as they do omit a noise which sounds very like a scream for help.

The black fox is considered unlucky, and like most black creatures is deemed to be a bad omen. This originates way back from the black dog which was said to bring disaster and doom to whoever saw it. Superstitions date back to medieval times when the villages were very afraid of the sighting of a black fox and considered it to denote huge trouble. Country villagers traditionally told stories of how the fox was as “black as night, so that it could live in a man’s shadow and never be seen”. It is very much linked to Gaelic tradition and superstition.

There is much folklore and superstition attached to the black fox, and ‘The Black Fox of Salmon River’ is one such story which evokes the magical and dark qualities of the Rare Black Fox.

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- The Magical Black Fox -

- The Black Fox of Salmon River -

Fed by the sparkling waters of smaller streams with such picturesque names as Blackledge River, Pine Brook, Jeremy’s River and Fawn Brook, the Salmon River flows down from Marlborough and Colchester, along the borders of East Hampton and East Haddam and finally empties into the Connecticut River, just below Haddam Neck. Meandering through deep gorges, past sleepy little towns like Leesville, under heavily wooded slopes and over several old mill dams, the Salmon, according to experienced judges of riparian beauty, is just about the prettiest little river in Connecticut.

Back in the days when Indians were the only inhabitants of the wilderness drained by the Salmon River, they called it the Tatamacuntaway, a name so long forgotten that even the earliest records fail to show it. But however it was designated, the lovely stream provided the Native Americans with some of the best fishing waters to be found in all of Connecticut. In addition, the woods, meadows and wetlands of the Salmon River basin created such an attractive habitat for wildlife that the Indians often travelled many miles to hunt the abundant game and birds which helped feed and clothe their families.

In the late seventeenth century, when the first whites discovered the hunting and fishing paradise of the Tatamacuntaway, the Indians were willing to share their knowledge of the area and to pass along their ancient skills to the newcomers. The Englishmen were particularly enthusiastic about the seemingly inexhaustible supply of sea-run salmon yielded up by the easy-flowing river with the hard-pronouncing name. As the whites became proficient at taking the swift silver-sides from the stream, the salmon became a staple of the local settlers’ diet and was soon honoured with a river-naming by the grateful English fishers. Though both the Indians and the fish have long since disappeared, the Salmon River it has been to this day.

During those early years, too, the white hunters who ranged the hills in the company of friendly Indians began to hear from their native guides a strange legend, a story so compelling and yet so tragic that they scarcely knew what to make of it. Along the banks of the Tatamacuntaway, the red men said, there lived a black fox endowed with mysterious powers never seen in another animal. The fox had a coat so thick and sleek that whatever hunter chanced to see the beautiful pelt had an immediate and overwhelming desire to possess it. However, the Indians claimed that as many times as one of their fox-haunted hunters had sent an arrow winging toward the heart of the jet-black beast, none had ever found its mark. Instead, each arrow would seem to pass directly through the animal’s body and emerge on the other side without causing any effect whatsoever.

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Then, they said, the magical fox would begin to run, luring the frustrated but fascinated hunter into a lengthy chase, often punctuated by additional shots from the archer — but always with the same strange results. Such was the obsession with killing the black fox, however, that no amount of failure could ever discourage the hunter from continuing the hunt. Rather, each futile shot and each unsuccessful chase seemed to strengthen in the hunter a passion to bring down the enchanted quarry once and for all.

Sometimes, the Indians said, their bemused braves would return from a two or three-day chase after the fox so exhausted they could hardly move, but never too tired to recount in great detail their amazing adventures with the ghostly animal. At other times, the red men were saddened to say, some hunters who had set out to find and kill the darkling creature were never again seen on earth. Each mysterious disappearance, the Indians believed, could be attributed to the whimsical, indifferent but alluring spirit dwelling within the black fox of Salmon River.

On first hearing the legend, white hunters merely laughed in disbelief. There was probably no truth at all to it, they said, because Indians were forever making up stories such as this to explain those things which they found otherwise unexplainable. But, even if there were some marvellous phantom fox prowling the banks of the Salmon River, the Englishmen had supreme confidence that their powerful muskets and shot would succeed where the Indians’ fragile bows and arrows had failed.

Nevertheless, when the reports came in from the first white gunners who actually saw and fired at the legendary black fox, they, too, contained the familiar ingredients of the red men’s stories. First would come the uncontrollable desire, then the rifle shots passing through the ghost-like body without effect and, finally, the futile, almost overpowering chases over miles of rough terrain, ending in babbling frustration or in the cases of those few who never returned from the hunt tragic destruction. As time went on, the bitter truth of the black fox of Salmon River was accepted by the whites who inhabited the fertile valley as it had been by the red hunters before them: covetousness warps and sometimes even kills the human animal.

More than a hundred years after the last Indian had passed from the Salmon River hunting and fishing grounds, and not long before the last Atlantic salmon would run up the languid stream to spawn, the legend of the black fox was evidently still a living tradition among the white residents of the mid-Connecticut River valley. For it was from this tradition that Hartford poet John G. C. Brainard drew inspiration for one of the most popular verses published in his Occasional Pieces of Poetry, in 1825. Entitled “The Black Fox of Salmon River”.

Brainard’s poem recaptured much of the mood and mystery of the original legend and probably did much to perpetuate the tradition far beyond its time. It ended, peacefully, with this: And there the little country girls Will stop to whisper, and listen, and look, and tell, while dressing their sunny curls, Of the Black Fox of Salmon Brook. -

From Legendary Connecticut by David E. Philips /ISBN 1-880684-05-5/

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- The Black Fox Myth -

The rare black fox now is considered little more than a myth. But in Surrey, UK in 2005, a man had an entire fox family living at the bottom of his garden, including an elusive black fox cub. The mother, a red fox had been living in his garden for years and regularly gave birth to black foxes, much to his delight. In this instance, as the foxes were cubs, there is all likelihood that the cub would develop a redder coat as it grows. The babies are born with a black coat which changes to a deep red as they mature.

In September 2008, in a village near Chorley, UK, a man was walking with his friend through a graveyard and there behind a gravestone a small black adult fox was sitting. The black colouring is actually a rare genetic flaw, which dates back hundreds of years. The man took some video footage which is now being studied. He said “I thought it was the Devil looking at me. It’s definitely a black fox”; a very exciting find.

He was hesitant at giving the exact location of his sighting as he was afraid that the rare fox would be hunted down and killed. “I thought, it’s a myth, he said; there’s no such thing”. Unfortunately, in the news a couple of days later it was reported that a black fox had been found dead near to the spot where the man reported seeing one.

A very sad tale of a very rare fox, and the first one to be sighted in the UK for many, many years. There has only ever been one other sighting, and today the extreme rarity of the beautiful black fox is now one number down, thanks to the destructive nature of mankind.-

Christianna Garrett-Martin

3 Responses to “The Rare Black Fox”

  1. richleighon 05 Apr 2009 at 9:28 pm edit this

    I’d love to see a black fox! I bet it would be absolutely beautiful to witness close up. They’re so rare that I doubt I ever will, but I’d imagine it would be amazing to see a black fox running along, especially if it was in the snow.

    It’s terrible that the black fox the man saw was hunted down. Why kill such a rare and beautiful creature? It’s just absolutely disgusting. Some people are so cruel.

    This is a brilliant article from you here as always. Very passionately written, and an absolute pleasure to read. You really are an incredibly talented writer, and always when I read your work it makes me feel so proud and I always love reading/re-reading your work.

  2. Anonymouson 07 Jun 2009 at 12:15 am edit this

    i have ablack fox living on my property. i didn’t know such acolor of fox existed. so, i have been reading afew articles on them. i liked yours the best. i have been having aproblem with them getting after the chickens. we recently penned the chickens so, now the fox are not as much a threat. we have been shooting at the fox, as well as my neighbors. but, i’m going to tell the neighbors about the rarity of the black fox. also, about them being on the endangered species list. someone suggested that a fox and adog must have mixed to get ablack fox, but as i have read thats not likely

  3. Anonymouson 16 Oct 2009 at 9:55 pm edit this

    I enjoyed reading the article and the photos of the black/silver fox.I must say that the figure of 1 in five foxes here in North America is somewhat inaccurate for the number born black coloured, in fact is only 1 in 50 and one could go a lifetime and never even see one in the wild.To date I have seen three and have photoed them all many times.I agree that it is cruel to harm or kill such wonderful and beneficial creatures such as foxes,no matter what their colour may be.A healthy fox is not a dangerous animal to humans and not many things that live need to fear them as well.Have a look on the website where I have many fox photos posted, the address is http://www.treknature.com/members/bobair/ ,I’m a big fan of all wildlife. Bob

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