My mother lived with me for many years, she had unending health issues, along with a totally messed up back that I have inherited, thanks mom. Anyway, she began to feed the feral cats that lived in our neighborhood. I told her she was making a huge mistake, that there would soon be many more of them, and I was correct. The numbers went from about 4 to about 12, to about 20 very quickly. The kittens weren't as wild as the mothers were, but they weren't anything close to a housecat. One day, she had set up a plastic storage container flipped upside down on top of some sort of legs as a "house" to let them eat out of the rain we were having. She went out into the back porch to put their food out for the night( I had given up fighting her about it), and as usual, the whole pack of them would appear almost instantly. The storage container had blown out into the yard, and she asked me to go get it and bring it up to the porch window so she could set it up again. About that time, I saw the Skunk that had joined the crowd of cats. Mom saw it about a second later, and started yelling, "Oh no, oh no, oh no!", and I saw her move faster than I had thought possible for her at that point in her life. She tossed the whole bag of food out into the back yard and slammed the window shut and came into the house at a good speed, and asked me if I had seen the Skunk. I told her I had seen it just before she started yelling. The Skunk was huge, and looked like he had just come out of a grooming place. Shiny and spotlessly clean. We watched him eat with the cats several times over the next few weeks, until mom finally decided that the cats left at that point, something was killing them off, had to go, and called a local guy who took them, and I'm serious, to a farm out West of town for mouse control. We saw that Skunk, who was very calm compared to the many others in the "Skunk Triangle" as the area we lived was nicknamed, until the West Nile virus (We think) got him along with about 90% of the Crows, Blue Jays, and Cardinals that were seen everywhere. If one of my dogs wasn't attacked because they got too close to a nest, it was a rare spring. It took several years for the birds and Skunks to recover. One odd thing was the huge Blue Jays that ruled the back yards in our neighborhood were replaced by smaller, less aggressive ones for several years, and then one spring, the huge, very nasty ones were back, killing sparrows any chance they got. About the time the big Blue Jays appeared, the Skunk population roared back too, but this time the "standard" Skunks I had seen my entire life in NW Ohio had been replaced with the swirly patterned smaller Skunks I wouldn't see until I got down towards Columbus. At present, I would say the mix in the part of town I live in now is 50/50 of the two. Another recent thing is black squirrels have appeared suddenly. I had never seen any here before a couple of years ago, and once I saw them, I rarely go a few days without seeing another one, or several.