For a state that doesnât have a known wild population of opossums, there seem to be a lot of the pesky critters around.Â
Despite what wildlife experts say, people in some areas around Wyoming report there are plenty of opossums, and they stink so badly even dogs and cats canât stand being around them.Â
Ken Bauer, who has a farm near the tiny community of Veteran in Goshen County, told Cowboy State Daily about an encounter that he, his father and their bird dog had with an opossum years ago.Â
âThe possum rolled over and played dead, and then the dog didnât like the smell and walked off, with kind of a disgusted look on his face,â he said.Â
He wonders whether that effect extends to wild predators.Â
âYouâll see an opossum and you think, âWhy didnât a coyote or a fox get him?â Well, they kind of smell bad,â he said.Â
âThe Cats Refuse To Eat The Babiesâ
Another Goshen County resident, Tammy Sterkel, who lives in the country near Lingle, told Cowboy State Daily that her cats have turned their noses up at baby opossums.Â
âMy cats will not eat the babies. Even though they look like a rat, the cats refuse to eat the babies,â she said.Â
Sterkel, Bauer and other Wyoming residents reached out to Cowboy State Daily regarding the story of an opossum showing up in a familyâs garage in Pine Bluffs.Â
The story noted that wildlife experts have listed Wyoming as a state that doesnât have an officially recognized permanent population of the critters.Â
Opossums Far And Wide
Opossums have apparently been in Goshen County for decades.
Rolf Amundson told Cowboy State Daily they also hang around his place in Platte County.Â
âWe have no shortage of them out where I live,â he said. âI live about 8 miles southwest of Wheatland. Iâve been here 20 years, and Iâve always had them out here.â
There are also numerous raccoons around, but Amundson said theyâre picky eaters compared to opossums.Â
âSometimes the cat dish gets a little rank and the raccoons wonât touch it. But the possums will come and clean it up,â he said. âIt seems like the worse something stinks, the more they like it.â
As to how far west in Wyoming opossums have ventured, Sterkel said her husband, Gary, has seen them while hunting elk in the Snowy Range mountains west of Laramie.
In the far southwest corner of the state, a large, ornery opossum nicknamed George was caught in June 2022 under someoneâs house west of Rock Springs, the Sweetwater County Sheriffâs Office reports.
Because opossums are âan animal that is not found in a wild, free or unconfined status in Wyoming,â keeping them as pets âis strictly regulated,â the SCSO said in its report about capturing George.
Egg ThievesÂ
Bauer said he first started seeing opossums while bird hunting with his father west of Torrington in the 1980s.Â
Sterkel said theyâve been around for as long as she can remember.Â
âAll my life, Iâve seen them here. My husbandâs lived out on this farm his whole life, and heâs been seeing them around the entire time,â she said.Â
The opossums are terrible around chicken coops, she said. They frequently steal eggs and sometimes even kill chickens.Â
In the past two months, theyâve trapped 11 opossums near their chicken coops and trapped 16 last year, Sterkel said.Â
âThey also love the cat food, I can tell you that,â she said.Â
Bauer said he also traps opossums occasionally. He drives them a few miles away from his place and sets them loose.Â
Sterkel and Bauer said that sardines make the best opossum bait.Â
âUse sardines,â Bauer said. âIf you had any skunks around or any opossums around, theyâre absolute suckers for it.âÂ
Baring Teeth
Sterkel said the opossums around her place are ânasty little creaturesâ with bad attitudes.Â
âThey donât play dead with the humans. If the dogs are out, theyâll play dead,â she said.Â
Sometimes the opossums bare their teeth and hiss at her, she said.Â
âWith the hissing and the teeth, theyâll startle you if youâre not expecting them,â she said.Â
Bauer said one thing that baffles him is how opossums manage to survive Wyoming winters.Â
âWhen you see them, they sure donât have a lot of fur, and theyâve got nothing on their tails,â he said.Â
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.