Groundhogs occasionally digging up bones, coffin pieces at Montreal cemetery
MONTREAL — When Michelle McSweeney saw a groundhog crawl into an above-ground tomb at Montreal’s Notre-Dame-des-Neiges cemetery, it was hard not to be freaked out.
“I heard it rattling around,” she said. “At least I saw it go in, otherwise I would have been really terrified.”
Groundhogs have long been a common sight around the city, where their scurrying presence may delight wildlife-watchers but constitutes a nuisance for gardeners tired of filling in burrow-holes.
But in the vast cemetery on the slopes of Mount Royal, the hole-digging behaviour has taken on a grimmer aspect as the rodents dig up old graves and occasionally leave bones scattered on the surface.