韩国某水族馆,下班了,聪明伶俐的水獭宝宝帮爷爷收拾玩具,爷爷拿出了冰块奖励给它们冰块。 pic.twitter.com/wKzAvC5igQ
— Luckylab_Vicky (@Vicky22955256) April 18, 2026
Living next to a river sounds poetic in theory—the gentle babbling of water, the morning mist, the serenity.
In reality, living next to a river means being the involuntary landlord to a gang of aquatic hooligans.
I am talking, of course, about the North American river otter.
My relationship with the local otter population, led by a scarred veteran I call “The Godfather,” began when I decided to build a decorative koi pond in my backyard.
I envisioned a Zen sanctuary; The Godfather envisioned a high-end sushi buffet with zero cover charge.
The Conflict of Interests
The first time I caught them, I walked out with my morning coffee to find three otters using my $500 Japanese koi as frisbees. They weren’t even hungry anymore; they were just playing “Extreme Fish Toss.”
When I yelled—a sound I intended to be a commanding roar but which came out as a startled yelp—The Godfather didn’t flee.
He stood up on his hind legs, tucked his paws into his chest, and gave me a look of pure, unadulterated judgment.
It was the look a waiter gives you when you ask for ketchup at a Michelin-star restaurant.
I tried everything. I installed motion-sensor sprinklers.
The otters treated them like a free water park, sliding through the grass and performing synchronized swimming routines in the spray.
I tried playing recordings of barking dogs. The otters sat on my patio furniture and tilted their heads as if critiquing the acoustics.
The Great Truce
The turning point in our relationship occurred last November. I had spent the afternoon trying to fix a leaking outdoor pipe in the freezing mud.
I was frustrated, covered in sludge, and had dropped my favorite wrench into the murky depths of the riverbank.
As I sat on the dock, nursing a bruised ego and cold hands, a sleek, wet head popped up three feet away.
It was The Godfather.
He stared at me for a long beat, disappeared underwater, and surfaced a minute later. He didn’t have my wrench.
Instead, he dropped a very large, very confused crayfish onto my boot.
He chirped—a sound that translated roughly to, “You look pathetic. Eat this and pull yourself together.”
Cohabitation and Chaos
From that day on, we reached a functional, albeit chaotic, understanding. I stopped trying to turn my backyard into a Zen garden and accepted that it was now a training facility for the Otter Olympics.
In exchange for me leaving out the occasional tribute of frozen smelt, the otters have taken it upon themselves to help with my yard work.
This help mostly involves:
- Architectural Redesign: They have dug a slide from my porch directly into the river. I call it a trip hazard; they call it a commute.
- Security: No stray cat or curious raccoon dares enter the yard. The otters have established a 24-hour aquatic patrol that is more effective (and much louder) than any alarm system.
- Entertainment: Watching an otter try to figure out how a hammock works is better than any sitcom. The Godfather once spent forty minutes trying to “tame” the mesh, eventually wrapping himself into a fuzzy burrito and falling asleep mid-air.
The man-otter relationship is not one of master and pet. It is a fragile diplomatic treaty between a creature with a mortgage and a creature with no concept of personal property.
I am effectively their butler, and they are my highly entertaining, incredibly smelly roommates.
Last week, I found my missing wrench on the dock. It was covered in fish scales and smelled like a wharf, but it was back. I think it was a tip for the smelt. I’m just glad they didn’t expect a receipt.

