Wyomingites are used to wild animals of all sorts wandering into their towns, and are generally tolerant of it. But when badgers start showing up on the streets, most folks draw the line.
âPeople donât like them, which is understandable, because badgers have that reputation for being mean,â critter catcher Jerry Lewis of Casper told Cowboy State Daily.
âPeople just get nervous about badgers. Itâs kind of like with bats, people get really nervous about bats, too,â added Lewis, who owns RKR Nuisance Wildlife Control.
But after catching a couple of these furry tanks in Casper, Lewis said he thinks badgers donât really deserve their bad reputation.
âIn my opinion, a badger is as mean as you make it. A badger would just as soon run as be messed with,â he said.
Just donât corner one, Lewis warned.
âOnce theyâre cornered, theyâll lay flat, and theyâre just nothing but teeth and claws after that,â he said.
Rawlins Rocking With Badgers
Rawlins has had some urban badgers hanging out around town for several years now.
On social media chatter boards, residents will occasionally post news of sightings, along with warnings for people to watch out for their dogs, cats and kids â in case of badger aggression.
Even so, resident Alana Engel said she doesnât mind the badgers, which are big, burrowing members of the weasel family.
Engel said sheâs aware of at least a couple of badgers that have taken up residence in a subdivision near the edge of town.
As far as sheâs concerned, the badgers are doing a public service by trimming down the prairie dog population.
âItâs in an area right where youâd expect to see a badger,â she said. âI walk my dog up there, and Iâve seen badgers up there once in a while.â
While others seem worried about the badgers, Engel said she and her dog have never had a run-in with them, only encountering them at a distance.
âThereâs not any drama. If you leave them alone, they leave you alone,â she said. âThereâs lots of prairie dogs for them to eat, so theyâre getting enough food, theyâre getting enough water.â

Caught Snoozing
Lewis said one badger he caught in Casper âwas really mellow.â
Some residents called him after they found a badger fast asleep in a tiny passageway between a shed and a fence.
It was an easy job, Lewis said. He just set a trap at one end, poked the badger with a pole to wake it up, and âhe ran right into the trap, because he had nowhere else to go.â
Lewis doesnât kill the animals he traps. He has a âcatch-and-releaseâ policy.
So he took the badger a long way out of Casper to the edge of a prairie dog town and set it loose. He figured that it would be way too busy hunting and gobbling down prairie dogs to amble back toward Casper.
Another badger he caught was a bit more cantankerous.
When they feel threatened, badgers might try to escape by digging. And thatâs just want this badger had done, trying to work its way under a privacy wall between two properties.
âWhen I got there, his butt was still out of the hole. So I hit him in the butt with my catch pole, and he turned around and hissed at me, and I was able to get the catch loop around him,â Lewis said.
âYouâve got to get that loop all the way over their front legs,â he added.
As with the other badger, Lewis took the irritated critter out to the prairie dog town and set it loose.
âI Get Stuck With The Frickenâ Skunksâ
While badgers havenât been active in Casper this year, âItâs been bumper year for racoons,â Lewis said.
âI donât know why. Apparently, nothing has been killing them, and theyâve been having a lot of babies,â he said. âIâve been pickup up whole family groups. Theyâve been getting into peopleâs yards, tearing things up, tipping over bird baths. Just acting like brats.â
Heâs been critter catching part-time since 2012, and hopes to eventually retire from his day job so he can go full-time in the nuisance wildlife business.
Itâs a specialized skill, to the best of his knowledge, Lewis said, and thereâs only one other certified critter catcher in Wyoming.
Itâs an important niche between city animal control and Game and Fish wildlife control, he added.
âMetro canât deal with wild animals any more, for the most part,â he said. âAnd Game and Fish will only deal with the big animals,â he said. âThey get the mountain lions and the bears, and I get stuck with the frickenâ skunks.â
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.