Description
As the winter snow melted from the roadsides one spring, I came upon the remnants of the cache of a red squirrel. Having read in wildlife books about this practice, it was exciting to see cobs of spruce cones heaped around the base of a maple, every one of them eaten to the core. So this was where my little friend had been dining all winter!
The most active and noisy of all the squirrels, the red squirrel, as seen in this wildlife painting, can cut as many as 100 cones an hour from a tree, and will store three to ten bushels in “pantries” for winter, carefully covering them up with leaves. Red squirrels, very similar in appearance to the one in the painting, have disappeared from the wildlife scene in many parts of Britain. An organization has been set up in South Scotland to preserve them.
Having my interest in this busy little creature piqued by coming upon the cache in the cold of winter, it was fun painting the red squirrel we photographed while vacationing in the Muskokas.

Moon Gate -10.5x7 Watercolour Print
Picnic in the Pines - Original Acrylic on Board 14x9 (Chipmunk) Framed
Big Ben - 6x7.75 - Print - Oil on Paper
Sir Wilfrid Laurier Climbing Roses - 6x9 Print - Watercolour Print
Big Belgian - 7x8.5 Print - Oil on Canvas
October - 9x12 - Print - Oil on Paper
Yellow Lady's Slipper - 4.25x5 Watercolour Print
Fireside Tea Party - 18x15 Watercolour Print (Framed)
Sunny Sill - 6x6.5 Watercolour Print (Framed)
Dall of the Yukon - 14x18 Oil on Paper Print 

