Living With Manitoba's Wildlife
Raccoons
The raccoon is the most common problem furbearer
in urban areas of the province. Manitoba
Conservation receives hundreds of raccoon complaints
each year in the city of Winnipeg alone, a figure
that is increasing steadily. Being extremely adaptable,
the raccoon is able to live almost anywhere and its
range continues to spread northward — in Manitoba,
its range continues to move beyond The Pas and towards
Thompson. If you have, or believe that you have,
raccoons damaging your property, you can do several
things.
Preventing Raccoon Problems
For raccoons or any wild animal,
deny them access to attractants, which can be food
or shelter. Keep all garbage and
composters in secure containers or enclosures. Because
those odours may still attract raccoons, you should
carry on with the steps below.
- Supervise children and inspect their outdoor
play structures beforehand.
- Cover sand play boxes to prevent raccoons from
using it as a latrine.
- Do not deliberately feed raccoons
- Do not leave garbage or pet food outdoors.
- Protect outdoor fish ponds with metal screens
or mesh
- Clean acorns and fruits that fall from trees
nearby.
- Clean up after outdoor cooking or picnics, especially
grease drippings from barbeques.
- Block even the smallest access to attics, sheds,
chimneys, or other potential dens and replace old
wooden roof materials
- Replace insulation in the attic and disinfect
the area if raccoons have gained access, since
the raccoon scent will linger and attract others
to the attic.
- Try strong-smelling repellents, such as oil of
mustard, bleach, cayenne pepper, naphtha flakes/
mothballs, or ammonia around garbage containers
and entrances to potential dens.
- Install lights around garbage and compost containers.
- Keep pets inside at night and closely supervise
them during the day.
- Remove over hanging branches to restrict their
access to roof tops.
- Vaccinate all your pets against rabies and other
diseases, as your veterinarian recommends
Encountering a Raccoon
In most towns and cities, Manitoba Conservation cannot
keep up with the overwhelming number of raccoon complaints. The
homeowner can to do a number of things to help themselves
in most cases. With raccoons or all wildlife:
- Do not feed, disturb or handle it. Most importantly,
do
not handle any young, as the mother is usually
nearby and can be viciously protective.
- If it is causing a problem, contact your local
animal control office, company or the nearest Manitoba
Conservation District Office. (Note:
If the problem is preventable such as open garbage
containers or fish ponds or involves raccoon faeces,
Manitoba Conservation will only provide advice to
the property owner.)
- Raccoons may not be
kept as pets in Manitoba; people
who do so risk injury from the animal and prosecution
by Manitoba Conservation.
- If you are injured (bitten, scratched), seek immediate
medical attention; if your pet is injured, seek immediate
veterinary attention.
- Raccoon faeces should be cleaned up using proper
materials to avoid personal contamination (shovels,
disposable rubber gloves, strong disinfectants, etc);
the faeces should be buried or sent securely to a
landfill; treat contaminated areas and tools with
disinfectant.
- If immediate help is not available with a raccoon
in a closed space (such as an attic, chimney), a
property owner can:
- Shoot or lethally trap it in a safe manner and
subject to local firearm laws; you must report
removal to a Natural
Resource Officer within 10
days.
- Place bright lights, a loud radio, and/or employ
repellents in/near the den to drive the animals
out.
- If the raccoon is caught in a chimney/stovepipe,
drop a rope down to allow it to climb out; bright
lights and a loud radio in the fireplace will encourage
the raccoons to leave; cap the chimney/stovepipe
once the animal is gone.
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Quick Access
Living with Wildlife
Beaver
Coyotes
Geese
Raccoons
White-tailed Deer
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Raccoon Links
- Furbearers
of Canada
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Hinterland Who’s Who Fact Sheet
- Living
With Wildlife
- Prevention
and Control
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Raccoon Roundworm
-
When Raccoons Become a Nuisance
- Raccoons — Wild
Furbearer Management/Conservation
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