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Posted: 2021-10-01T20:26:34Z | Updated: 2021-10-01T20:26:34Z

A squirrel in Fargo, North Dakota, is really nuts for walnuts to the point where it collected 42 gallons of the snack and stored them in a local mans Chevy Avalanche.

Bill Fischer said he came home from a four-day work trip earlier this month and discovered that his truck was filled with black walnuts, each roughly the size of a lime.

As his Facebook photos show, the walnuts were tucked into every nook and cranny of the Chevy, including the engine compartment and the fenders. Fischer removed enough to fill seven 6-gallon containers.

I had to pull the fenders off and clean out all the walnuts out, and thought I had them all and took it down the road, turned the corner and found one rolling down the windshield where the wipers go, Fischer told the Grand Forks Herald .

As nutty as this all might seem, its nut the first time this has happened.

Fischer said red squirrels have been using his truck to store walnuts from his neighbors tree every two years the trees maturation cycle since 2013.

Ive got other vehicles that sit very close to that tree, and its always my truck, Fischer told The Washington Post. Ive even parked purposely out on the street as far away as I can from the walnut tree and they still go find the Avalanche and hide them in there.

Over the years, Fischer has learned how to deal with the squirrelly behavior. He knows when the walnuts fall off the tree, its time to check the engine. Hes also learned to wait until there are no walnuts left lying under the tree before commencing his cleanup.

The squirrel will sit in the tree and watch me clean up the walnuts almost like: Thats mine, buddy, as hes watching me clean up his winter storage, Fischer told the Post.

Still, he wasnt prepared for just how many nuts would be squirreled away this year.

The squirrel set a record, Fischer said. Most Ive ever pulled out was four or five 6-gallon buckets. This year was seven.

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Fischer had to remove the fenders from the truck to extract some of the nuts, which he is now offering to any human who wants them. Much to the chagrin of the squirrel, hell throw away any that arent claimed, he added.

But the squirrels cache wont be completely gone.

I have some rolling around the frame, rails wells as well, that I cant get at, Fischer told the Grand Forks Herald.

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Thank you for your past contribution to HuffPost. We are sincerely grateful for readers like you who help us ensure that we can keep our journalism free for everyone.

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