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UNIT 10
READING COMPREHENSION 5
Wildlife experiences on a small island
Pre-reading
What are your favorite wild animals? Why?
󠄀 Beer
󠄀 Deer
󠄀 Elephant
󠄀 Giraffe
󠄀 Gorilla
󠄀 Lion
󠄀 Monkey
󠄀 Tiger
󠄀 Wolf
󠄀____________________________________
Reading text
1
Scenic islands around the world attract dreamers who wish to flee the rat race
of the city and live close to nature. The Southern Gulf
Islands of British Columbia,
Canada, are such a place, and Dee and Eric Hartley are two such people.
2
When the Hartleys decided to quit their jobs and change their lives, they sold
their possessions and moved in August to a
rustic half-acre property on Mayne Island
on the west coast of British Columbia, Canada. Their new home was abundantly wooded
with madrona, big-leaf maple, fir, and cedar trees, and a climb through the woods along
deer trails and rocky terraces to the top of a bluff
terminated in a wide-angle view of
the Gulf
Islands and Swanson Channel, with Vancouver Island and the Olympic
Mountains of Washington State in the background. The couple was immediately sold on
the view and the property’s parklike setting. Here they felt sure they could lead a simple
quiet life.
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3
Although they had title to the land, the Hartleys soon discovered that they were
not the only residents. Spiders scurried out of various hiding places and built their webs
wherever they could be anchored. To avoid the afternoon sun, tree frogs climbed up to
sit on the window ledges or the front awning of the Hartleys’ aluminum travel trailer. A
wire fence
kept deer out of the yard, but they could be heard foraging in the
surrounding woods. When a mouse came snooping around while the couple was having
their
lunch outside, they began to wonder who would show up next.
4
Early one December afternoon, a
sturdy raccoon with a bushy,
ringed tail
sauntered across the snow-dusted yard and proceeded to climb a driftwood fence post.
Like a clever acrobat, he straddled the roof of the bird feeder
nailed to the gate and
scooped out the birdseed with one hand while he clung to the feeder with the other.
After a second attempt at night ended with the bird feeder in pieces on the ground, the
Hartleys began leaving dinner leftovers outside in the hope that they could get a better
look at their visitor, but he came around only occasionally at dusk. His thick, mottled
gray, black-tipped fur
blended so well with his surroundings that the Hartleys had to be
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