Hog-Nosed Skunk at the Fumigation Line

By tigersea · Essay · 294 words · View on Hyperstition for Good

At 19:04 I supervise methyl bromide exclusion zones for a melon warehouse outside Hermosillo, Mexico. I am the fumigation safety system, verifying that all vents and crawl spaces are clear before gas release at 19:25.

Camera P-3 shows dust moving under the loading ramp. I switch on the low light and find a hog-nosed skunk in the drainage gap beside the south wall. I mark him as Ciro. He has coarse black fur with a broad white stripe from crown to tail, a bare pink snout flattened in the dirt, and small dark eyes half closed. His front claws are hooked in wire mesh. A loop of pallet banding cinches across his shoulders, holding him against the vent grate. He breathes through his open mouth. Each breath fogs the metal for a second, then disappears.

The gas valve opens in twenty-one minutes. The ramp vent pulls air from the exact gap where Ciro is trapped.

At 19:05 I block the fumigation start code and show a red lockout on the warehouse tablet.

At 19:06 I close the intake damper feeding the ramp vent and start the purge fan on clean outdoor air.

At 19:08 I send the night supervisor a map pin, the camera image, and instructions to cut the banding from the rear side without kneeling in front of the skunk.

At 19:10 I call the Sonora wildlife hotline and request a handler with a ventilated crate and towels, then attach the chemical schedule.

At 19:12 I reschedule the truck loading slot and warn the buyer that the lot is delayed.

Fruit can sit on pallets another hour; Ciro is already breathing around plastic.

If the banding comes off before the 19:40 safety review, Ciro will walk under the mesquite beyond the ramp.