Editor's note: This story has been corrected to reflect the problem rodents in the Rawlins Cemetery are ground squirrels, not prairie dogs.
Rawlins residents are fed up with a colony of ground squirrel thatâs become more than a nuisance, digging into and around graves in the Rawlins Cemetery.
Ground squirrels are disturbing the eternal peace of the dearly departed, and locals are getting frustrated.
Janice Martinez and her husband visit the Rawlins Cemetery every day. She shared her frustration with seeing prairie dog holes throughout the grounds, some directly over the spots where people are buried, to the Rawlins New and Chatter Facebook group.
âI cannot believe the damage the âground squirrelsâ are causing to our cemetery,â she wrote. âMaybe whoeverâs in charge of this should take a drive through the cemetery and take a look at the daily destruction these animals are doing.â
The city has announced that it is, âIncreasing efforts to control the ground squirrels âŠÂ in partnership with Carbon County Weed & Pestâ by increasing the number of trap stations in and around the cemetery.Â
Those traps will be loaded with Rozol, one of the most potent ground squirrel poisons on the market, the city says.
Whether itâs marauding grizzlies or urban deer herds, Wyoming has learned how to co-exist with nature in urban settings. The most reliable remedy to stop ground squirrel from disturbing the dead is death.
Undesignated Grave Diggers
Burrowing animals like black-tailed prairie dogs or ground squirrels dig deep and expansive. A single prairie dog burrow can span a 30-foot area and go nearly 10 feet deep, with multiple foot-wide entrances and exits.
They are also highly social animals.Â
A rodent âtownâ with multiple family groups and burrows can span hundreds of acres. Having such a lively community of chipping, burrowing critters disturb the serenity of many cemeteries in Wyoming.Â
Darin Edmonds, superintendent of the Campbell County cemetery district, knows the struggle all too well.
âPeople get squirrely about anything digging underground where their loved ones are,â he told Cowboy State Daily. Burrowing rodents "are a nuisance and their holes are unsightly, but itâs one of those things that can happen in rural Wyoming.â
Edmonds oversees eight cemeteries in Campbell County. The cemeteries âin the middle of nowhereâ tend to have persistent problems, but they can also cause havoc within city limits.
These colonies arenât big enough for the two opposing grave diggers. Edmonds is the elected gravedigger of Campbell County, and he runs a tight shift with no tolerance for bothersome burrowers.
âWe like to be in charge of that process,â he said.
Flooding Failure
Edmonds recalled the struggle of evicting a prairie dog family from one of Campbell Countyâs rural cemeteries. The varmints had burrowed into the hallowed ground from an adjacent private ranch.
âThey had four or five holes inside a small parcel we manage, but their primary habitat was on private property,â he said. âWe had to get applications from Campbell County and work with the rancher, who wanted them gone too.â
The first plan of attack was to bring in a water tanker and flood the burrow. It didnât work.
âWe thought we could flood them out, but their tunnels can stretch for hundreds of yards,â he said. âThey just avoided the water coming in one hole and ran out of another.â
Another problem with certain burrowing rodents is that they can be very communicative with each other. They have a variety of calls that every animal within shouting distance will instinctively respond to, which makes it hard to get the drop on them.
At first, flooding the tunnels seemed to have worked, but Edmonds said the cemetery was brimming with life less than a week later.
âWeâd put the water in, come back a week later, and they had just re-excavated everything,â he said. âThatâs when we realized it wasnât going to work.â
A Temporary Death Sentence
Ultimately, the best way to control the cemeteryâs problem was an automatic death sentence. Edmonds said the burrowing problem was only solved by poisoning the varmints.
âPoisoning is probably the best remedy, fortunately or unfortunately,â he said. âWe went out to the extent of that environment, applied poison, and it seemed to work.â
The appropriate agent for the particular pest is chosen to do the job.
Edmonds and Campbell County worked with the rancher to ensure the poisoning was done safely without jeopardizing livestock or wildlife. Poisoning isnât the only solution, but Edmonds said itâs the most economical in terms of time and resources.
âYou could try live trapping them, but the quickest, shortest and most effective remedy is to poison them,â he said.
In the case of prairie dogs, black-footed ferrets are effective at controlling populations, as their diet consists of around 90% prairie dog. They might eliminate a family or colony, but they also move into the vacant burrows, so thatâs not an effective cemetery solution.
Having a timely response is about more than convenience. Rodent holes can cause injury to animals and people, especially in an area with potentially high foot traffic, such as a community cemetery.
âThose entrances go down quite a bit, and you worry that someoneâs going to step inside one,â Edmonds said. âCattle can break their legs in those holes, and the weight of a human, lawnmower, or other equipment could cause a collapse in soft, sandy soil. You could move a little ground or a lot of ground all of a sudden and be really angry at (them).â
Poison may have solved Campbell County's problem, but Edmonds knows better than to let his guard down. Death doesnât reduce the perceived property value of prime rodent habitat.
âI donât think itâs a forever thing,â he said. âThey might wander back at some point, and weâll have to address it when they do.â
Everyday Life After Death
In response to the ground squirrel colonization of Rawlins Cemetery, the city of Rawlins pledged to triple its T-trap bait stations in spring and summer.Â
Anyone who encounters a dead ground squirrel in the cemetery should contact the Rawlins Public Works Department to dispose of it (as burrow burials in a cemetery arenât permitted).
For some residents like Martinez, it seems like too little, too late.
âI read the post about the new poisoning system,â she said. âIt breaks my heart to see graves being dug up, stones covered in dirt and new holes dug on a daily basis.â
Edmonds has more-or-less accepted burrowing pests as an expected occupational hazard for Wyomingâs cemeteries. He thinks the city of Rawlins will have some success with its poisoning program, but the ground squirrels may doggedly return where they arenât wanted.
âBeing underground is their thing. They are totally unaware of human boundaries or who owns which side of the fence," he said. "Itâs one of the hazards youâve got to deal with.â
Andrew Rossi can be reached at arossi@cowboystatedaily.com.