A Charmin’ Tale

The odor was getting intense as the woodchuck followed the toxic cloud through the tunnels of her burrow. Where was it coming from? It smelled like a toilet had exploded but it wasn’t from her own segregated bathroom area—she kept that very tidy with mint and lavender PooPourri she gathered from the meadow. She might be an animal, but she certainly didn’t have to live like one.

“Watch out!”  The warning shout was overwhelmed by a sickening squelching sound as her hind quarters sank deeply into a disgusting pile, and she found herself midway up her haunch in someone else’s poop. The woodchuck was so incensed she couldn’t formulate words, just sputtering expletives and variations on Eewwwww.

“I tried to warn you,” said her very unhelpful cousin Shirley, her head sticking down in the entrance while she held her snout. “The weasel has been going around taking a dump in the burrows of animals who Marched a few weeks ago.” She extended a paw to her cousin and with a mighty heave, pulled the woodchuck up and out of the tunnel with an embarrassing sucking sound. The woodchuck rolled in the dry grass and scooted like a dog with clogged anal glands, but the smell had inhabited her being like an odorous poltergeist. She finally plunged into the nearby stream and stayed underwater as long as possible, much to the horror of the beavers who were doing some finishing work on their latest dam. The ferret keeping watch snickered and jeered, and then scurried off to report to the weasel, hoping to move up through the ranks of deputies to Number 2. 

Finally clean, lying on a large, flat rock to dry in the sun, the woodchuck thought about what the weasel had done. There were droppings everywhere in the meadow and a lot of information could be gathered from the spoor dotting the field; what kind of seed and nuts were in season, who’d been eating leftover Halloween Tootsie Rolls with the wrapper on, that sort of thing. On the next rock over, a colony of rabbits was engaged in a game of coprophagia roulette. They were tossing pellets of their own turds into each other’s mouths—when the catcher caught one, the hare who threw it had to do a shot of carrot juice and then a verse of Little Bunny Foo Foo. They called it scat singing.

Shirley brought over some catalpa leaves to absorb the moisture, and as she dried off her cousin, the woodchuck sat up and declared, “Only I get to poop in my burrow! I am going to get revenge!” 

“Well, you can’t do anything to physically to harm him because the ferrets are always around and they will cut you. I think the best route is to find a way to prank him. You know how much he hates to be laughed at.” The woodchuck agreed and the two of them started brainstorming ideas for some payback humiliation. 

“Maybe we could set up a Wheel of Fortune game and get him to play, and every time he tries to solve the puzzle, all the other players could shout “Vanna, he would like to buy a bowel!”

Bad ideas were bounced back and forth, and the two rodents were getting sillier. Shirley had been pacing while dropping one-liners “. . .  and then the waiter says, “May I take your ordure?!” and finally collapsed on the flat rock. Her butt came in contact with two catalpa leaves that were stuck together and as she flattened them, it made a small Pffttt! sound. 

“You farted!” shrieked the woodchuck, gasping for breath. “I did not,” Shirley fiercely defended her dignity. “It was the leaves; they had air between them . . .” her voice trailed off as she looked at what she had sat on. “The meadow is basically one big toilet, so why is farting still so embarrassing?” 

The blind woodchuck picked up the leaf and said thoughtfully, “You know, we could make a whole bunch of these . . .” 

“. . . and distribute them all over the grass,” Shirley added.

The woodchuck continued excitedly ” . . . and then scratch A Message from Your Leader across the front . . .”

“. . . so it sounds like he’s farting!” the two of them shouted in unison.

Soon the entire meadow was on board, as the weasel had dropped his excremental calling card in each of their homes. It was fall and the giant catalpa leaves carpeted the ground, making the gathering of raw materials simple. A production line was set up and everyone worked together, sealing the edges of two leaves together with sap. The platypus had a glue gun, which was even faster. The woodchuck could not figure out how it was working as there was no electricity in the meadow, and when questioned, the platypus looked at her blankly and said, “I have a long extension cord.”

The chipmunks had the best penmanship, and they busied themselves scratching the message across the front. The possums blew a little air into the opening, and soon there was a pile of innocent looking catalpa bombs. They were scattered across the meadow and the woods, blending into the fallen leaves like tiny flatulent mines.

“He’s coming!” the beaver hissed. The crowd of animals silently parted as the weasel and his crew of ferrets started to walk through them. He made the royal wave as he walked on his hind legs, already assuming that his manure message had not been wasted. They were his subjects now and he demanded their respect. 

As he stepped forward, there was suddenly a loud farting noise. The crowd held its breath, and the weasel said, “I didn’t do that!” He looked at one of the ferrets behind him who blushed and waved sheepishly as he accepted the blame.

The weasel took another step, and the sound was even louder. His pace quickened and the farts kept coming; soon he was running and the rapid machine gun repeat of ca-ca-ca-ca-ca-ca-ca followed him as the animals pointed and laughed, chanting, “He who smelt it dealt it!”

The weasel and his minions disappeared into the forest, the mockery of the animals echoing through the trees. The woodland creatures knew he would be back—this was not the dunghill he would die on—but they took their small victories when they could get them. It had been a long day, and they were all pooped. It was time to go home.

• • •

I freely share this idea with the world, so if anyone wants to start a GoFund Me to produce Whoopee Cushions with A Message from Your President scrawled across the front, go for it! They could be passed out at the next March and would also make a lovely souvenir.

• • •

The woodchuck has a new burrow! You can still hang around here with the other woodland animals, but the iguanas and the platypus have moved over to Substack, where they hope to reach millions of new readers and possibly amass a fortune in cicadas! (The woodchuck doesn’t really expect you to hand over your tasty bugs—she’s just hoping for new eyes to read about her adventures.) Look for her at The Blind Woodchuck on Substack.