Old Granny Fox

Old Granny Fox and grandson Reddy Fox must use all their cunning to hunt up enough food to survive the long winter. Food in the Green Meadow is scarce but Farmer Brown's hens are locked up tight and protected by Bowser the Hound, so Granny takes a conceited Reddy hunting and teaches him some surprising new tricks to lure in their dinner. Old Granny and Reddy Fox encounter danger and adventure in their quests to keep their bellies full, including a close encounter with Farmer Brown's boy, a clever plot to steal Bowser's food, and an unforeseen thief who might outsmart this sneaky pair.


By : Thornton W. Burgess (1874 - 1965)

01 - Reddy Fox Brings Granny News



02 - Granny and Reddy Fox Go Hunting



03 - Reddy is Sure Granny Has Lost Her Senses



04 - Quacker the Duck Grows Curious



05 - Reddy Fox is Afraid to Go Home



06 - Old Granny Fox is Caught Napping



07 - Granny Fox Has a Bad Dream



08 - What Farmer Brown's Boy Did



09 - Reddy Fox Hears About Granny Fox



10 - Reddy Fox is Impudent



11 - After the Storm



12 - Granny and Reddy Fox Hunt in Vain



13 - Granny Fox Admits Growing Old



14 - Three Vain and Foolish Wishes



15 - Reddy Fights a Battle



16 - Reddy is Made Truly Happy



17 - Granny Fox Promises Reddy Bowser's Dinner



18 - Why Bowser the Hound Didn't Eat His Dinner



19 - Old Man Coyote Does a Little Thinking



20 - A Twice Stolen Dinner



21 - Granny and Reddy Talk Things Over



22 - Granny Fox Plans to Get a Fat Hen



23 - Farmer Brown's Boy Forgets to Close the Gate



24 - A Midnight Visit



25 - A Dinner for Two



26 - Farmer Brown's Boy Sets a Trap



27 - Prickly Porky Takes a Sun Bath



28 - Prickly Porky Enjoys Himself



29 - The New Home in the Old Pasture


Pray who is there who would refuse
   To bearer be of happy news?
      —Old Granny Fox.
Snow covered the Green Meadows and the Green Forest, and ice bound the Smiling Pool and the Laughing Brook. Reddy and Granny Fox were hungry most of the time. It was not easy to find enough to eat these days, and so they spent nearly every minute they were awake in hunting. Sometimes they hunted together, but usually one went one way, and the other went another way so as to have a greater chance of finding something. If either found enough for two, the one finding it took the food back to their home if it could be carried. If not, the other was told where to find it.

For several days they had had very little indeed to eat, and they were so hungry that they were willing to take almost any chance to get a good meal. For two nights they had visited Farmer Brown's henhouse, hoping that they would be able to find a way inside. But the biddies had been securely locked up, and try as they would, they couldn't find a way in.

“It's of no use,” said Granny, as they started back home after the second try, “to hope to get one of those hens at night. If we are going to get any at all, we will have to do it in broad daylight. It can be done, for I have done it before, but I don't like the idea. We are likely to be seen, and that means that Bowser the Hound will be set to hunting us.”

“Pooh!” exclaimed Reddy. “What of it? It's easy enough to fool him.”

“You think so, do you?” snapped Granny. “I never yet saw a young Fox who didn't think he knew all there is to know, and you're just like the rest. When you've lived as long as I have you will have learned not to be quite so sure of your own opinions. I grant you that when there is no snow on the ground, any Fox with a reasonable amount of Fox sense in his head can fool Bowser, but with snow everywhere it is a very different matter. If Bowser once takes it into his head to follow your trail these days, you will have to be smarter than I think you are to fool him. The only way you will be able to get away from him will be by going into a hole in the ground, and when you do that you will have given away a secret that will mean we will never have any peace at all. We will never know when Farmer Brown's boy will take it into his head to smoke us out. I've seen it done. No, Sir, we are not going to try for one of those hens in the daytime unless we are starving.”

“I'm starving now,” whined Reddy.

“No such thing!” Granny snapped. “I've been without food longer than this many a time. Have you been over to the Big River lately?”

“No,” replied Reddy. “What's the use? It's frozen over. There isn't anything there.”

“Perhaps not,” replied Granny, “but I learned a long time ago that it is a poor plan to overlook any chance. There is a place in the Big River which never freezes because the water runs too swiftly to freeze, and I've found more than one meal washed ashore there. You go over there now while I see what I can find in the Green Forest. If neither of us finds anything, it will be time enough to think about Farmer Brown's hens to-morrow.”

Much against his will Reddy obeyed. “It isn't the least bit of use,” he grumbled, as he trotted towards the Big River. “There won't be anything there. It is just a waste of time.”

Late that afternoon he came hurrying back, and Granny knew by the way that he cocked his ears and carried his tail that he had news of some kind. “Well, what is it?” she demanded.

“I found a dead fish that had been washed ashore,” replied Reddy. “It wasn't big enough for two, so I ate it.”

“Anything else?” asked Granny.

“No-o,” replied Reddy slowly; “that is, nothing that will do us any good. Quacker the Wild Duck was swimming about out in the open water, but though I watched and watched he never once came ashore.”

“Ha!” exclaimed Granny. “That is good news. I think we'll go Duck hunting.”

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