perhaps is bears repeating that black squirrels are simply the melanic color phase of gray squirrels. they are the same specie, Sciurus Carolinensis, to be exact. they do not "cross breed". apparently there are three variants in gray squirrels coloration. the "normal" gray color, the jet black phenotype and the brown-black phenotype. I've heard some people claim that they believe fox squirrels and gray squirrels interbreed, but scientists think otherwise. I suspect the brown-black color phase of the gray squirrel is the one that would make people think it is a cross between a gray and a fox squirrel. I've seen exactly one squirrel fitting the description of the brown-black variant of a gray, and it surely made me think of a cross between a fox and gray squirrel. but they are different species and do not interbreed. this concludes todays biology lesson. :smile:
Dog cleared for take off by the vet, so we headed south yesterday. My buddy and I got 9 grays, but they sure didn't seem to be out very good. dog treed one other that ran into a leaf nest before we could get a shot. we covered every bit of timber on the 290 acre farm we hunt and jumped only one deer. pitiful. had one crazy ass rat bail out of tree from about 50 feet up. Lefty saw it sailing to the ground and ran it down after a short chase on the ground. that was bad-ass right there!
the property I hunt in Licking county has a population of black squirrels, but I am forbidden to kill them. I rarely see them anywhere besides up near the house, anyway. lots of squirrels on that 100 acres, considering only about 40-50 acres of it is wooded. demographic breaks down, roughly, to 60% grey (50% gray color, 10% jet black) and 35% fox, 5% or less red squirrels (aka Pine squirrel, mountain jack).
I killed a black squirrel in Knox county a few weeks ago in a place where we've seen nothing other than fox squirrels. first one I've ever shot. methinks that one might have been relocated from town or something.