Community Corner

VIDEO: Mooresville Resident Reacts To Finding Fox On Front Porch

Video as seen on Neighbors app shows a Mooresville resident finding a fox on their front porch Christmas Eve.

Video as seen on Neighbors app shows a Mooresville resident finding a fox on their front porch Christmas Eve.
Video as seen on Neighbors app shows a Mooresville resident finding a fox on their front porch Christmas Eve. (Photo via the Neighbors app)

MOORESVILLE, NC — A Mooresville resident had a startling wildlife visit caught on a home security camera Christmas Eve when he found a fox brazenly hanging out on his front porch.

In the Dec. 24 video, the Mooresville resident is seen coming out of the home and looking around his porch, before saying, “Oh my goodness!” and retreatingback inside. Behind him, a fox is seen scurrying across the porch and down the steps to the neighborhood sidewalk.

Red foxes are found across all of North Carolina and can weigh up to 15 pounds, according to the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission. While they prefer farmland and brushy fields for their diet of mice and rabbits, they will eat insects and birds and may scavenge through garbage.

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Here are some tips from NC Wildlife for preventing conflicts with foxes:

  • Don’t try to approach or pet a fox. Enjoy the sighting of a fox, and other wildlife, from a respectful distance.
  • Don’t feed foxes, wild animals, or feral cats. Foxes will lose their fear of people. Feeding a fox rewards it for coming near people. Once a fox becomes habituated to people, it may become bold and aggressive.
  • Secure garbage in containers with tight-fitting lids, and take them out in the morning of pick up, not the night before. Coyotes and other wildlife will scavenge trash that is not secured.
  • Feed pets indoors or remove food when your pet is finished eating outside. Foxes and other wildlife are attracted to pet food left outdoors.
  • Close off crawl spaces under sheds, porches, decks, homes. Foxes may use these spaces to rest or to build their dens.
  • Clear fallen fruit from around trees.
  • Keep bird-feeder areas clean, and use bird feeders that keep seed off the ground. Foxes are attracted to small
  • Secure pets or keep them indoors. Dogs and cats can disturb dens, prompting aggressive fox behavior from the foxes.
  • Install fox-proof fencing, around your home, chicken coop or rabbit pen to protect unsupervised domestic pets. Electric fencings work well to protect chickens and rabbits and can be found at your local home improvement store.
  • Place and play a radio near a den site. The noise will encourage the fox to move her den. Shining a flashlight on the den entrance and leaving it there will also encourage the fox to leave.
  • Yell, bang pots and pans or use other noise-making devices to scare foxes from your yard. This will also maintain their wariness of people.
  • Educate your neighbors. Your efforts to prevent fox conflicts will be less effective if neighbors are still providing foods.

Ring, the owner of the Neighbors app, is a Patch advertiser. Patch received no compensation for this article.

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