If’ you’ve seen this, then you know why I felt it worthwhile to share. Here’s a story which has been making its rounds in FB…….
(A letter from someone who wants to remain anonymous, who farms, writes well and actually tried this)
I had this idea that I could rope a deer, put it in a stall, feed it up on corn for a couple of weeks, then kill it and eat it. The first step in this adventure was getting a deer. I figured that, since they congregate at my cattle feeder and do not seem to have much fear of me when we are there (a bold one will sometimes come right up and sniff at the bags of feed while I am in the back of the truck not 4 feet away), it should not be difficult to rope one, get up to it and toss a bag over its head (to calm it down) then hog tie it and transport it home.
I filled the cattle feeder then hid down at the end with my rope. The cattle, having seen the roping thing before, stayed well back. They were not having any of it. After about 20 minutes, my deer showed up– 3 of them. I picked out a likely looking one, stepped out from the end of the feeder, and threw my rope. The deer just stood there and stared at me. I wrapped the rope around my waist and twisted the end so I would have a good hold.
The deer still just stood and stared at me, but you could tell it was mildly concerned about the whole rope situation. I took a step towards it, it took a step away. I put a little tension on the rope, and then received an education. The first thing that I learned is that, while a deer may just stand there looking at you funny while you rope it, they are spurred to action when you start pulling on that rope.
That deer EXPLODED. The second thing I learned is that pound for pound, a deer is a LOT stronger than a cow or a colt. A cow or a colt in that weight range I could fight down with a rope and with some dignity. A deer– no Chance. That thing ran and bucked and twisted and pulled. There was no controlling it and certainly no getting close to it. As it jerked me off my feet and started dragging me across the ground, it occurred to me that having a deer on a rope was not nearly as good an idea as I had originally imagined. The only upside is that they do not have as much stamina as many other animals.
A brief 10 minutes later, it was tired and not nearly as quick to jerk me off my feet and drag me when I managed to get up. It took me a few minutes to realize this, since I was mostly blinded by the blood flowing out of the big gash in my head. At that point, I had lost my taste for corn-fed venison. I just wanted to get that devil creature off the end of that rope.
I figured if I just let it go with the rope hanging around its neck, it would likely die slow and painfully somewhere. At the time, there was no love at all between me and that deer. At that moment, I hated the thing, and I would venture a guess that the feeling was mutual. Despite the gash in my head and the several large knots where I had cleverly arrested the deer’s momentum by bracing my head against various large rocks as it dragged me across the ground, I could still think clearly enough to recognize that there was a small chance that I shared some tiny amount of responsibility for the situation we were in. I didn’t want the deer to have to suffer a slow death, so I managed to get it lined back up in between my truck and the feeder – a little trap I had set before hand…kind of like a squeeze chute. I got it to back in there and I started moving up so I could get my rope back.
Did you know that deer bite? They do! I never in a million years would have thought that a deer would bite somebody, so I was very surprised when ….. I reached up there to grab that rope and the deer grabbed hold of my wrist. Now, when a deer bites you, it is not like being bit by a horse where they just bite you and slide off to then let go. A deer bites you and shakes its head–almost like a pit bull. They bite HARD and it hurts.
The proper thing to do when a deer bites you is probably to freeze and draw back slowly. I tried screaming and shaking instead. My method was ineffective.
It seems like the deer was biting and shaking for several minutes, but it was likely only several seconds. I, being smarter than a deer (though you may be questioning that claim by now), tricked it. While I kept it busy tearing the tendons out of my right arm, I reached up with my left hand and pulled that rope loose.
That was when I got my final lesson in deer behavior for the day.
Deer will strike at you with their front feet. They rear right up on their back feet and strike right about head and shoulder level, and their hooves are surprisingly sharp… I learned a long time ago that, when an animal -like a horse –strikes at you with their hooves and you can’t get away easily, the best thing to do is try to make a loud noise and make an aggressive move towards the animal. This will usually cause them to back down a bit so you can escape.
This was not a horse. This was a deer, so obviously, such trickery would not work. In the course of a millisecond, I devised a different strategy. I screamed like a woman and tried to turn and run. The reason I had always been told NOT to try to turn and run from a horse that paws at you is that there is a good chance that it will hit you in the back of the head. Deer may not be so different from horses after all, besides being twice as strong and 3 times as evil, because the second I turned to run, it hit me right in the back of the head and knocked me down.
Now, when a deer paws at you and knocks you down, it does not immediately leave. I suspect it does not recognize that the danger has passed. What they do instead is paw your back and jump up and down on you while you are laying there crying like a little girl and covering your head.
I finally managed to crawl under the truck and the deer went away. So now I know why when people go deer hunting they bring a rifle with a scope……to sort of even the odds!!
All these events are true so help me God…An Educated Farmer
h/t D
A city in Missouri was having a deer population explosion, with many vehicular strikes and even aggressive behavior towards residents. Being a suburb of St Louis, the cidiots decided they ‘felt’ bad about killing Bambi et al and hired a commercial game preserve from Texas to come up and remove the deer (I think it was close to a million dollar contract). The plan was to tranquilize the deer, cage them, and then transport them to Texas where they could be shot! Win-win for Texans, not so much for the deer.
The problem came when the deer woke up in a cage on a noisy truck. When the doors were opened in Texas, the deer had beat themselves to death in the cages, and not one survived.
Bow hunters have since solved the problem without any cost to the taxpayers.
Silly city people!
roaring laughing……now I have to go pee!
WOOPS
Germany Forced to Cancel Climate Programs
By the end of the month, Environment Minister Peter Altmaier, a member of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative Christian Democrats, is set to cut the program aimed at promoting electric cars, a fund for research and development of energy storage technologies and a third program focused on protecting and expanding forestland in Germany as a way to absorb more CO2 out of the atmosphere. In April, further programs are on the chopping block, according to an internal ministry document seen by SPIEGEL. In total, 14 programs or one-time measures are affected
http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/germany-cancels-trio-of-climate-programs-amid-funding-shortfall-a-889483.html
Gentle creatures, deer. Disney said so, so we should believe it. Glad I wasn’t drinking morning coffee whilst reading.
I have a whole pile of creatures who will eat out of my hand, kookaburras, currawongs, butcher birds and a couple of brushtailed possums. So now I know each one is thinking as I feed it “make my day, punk”.
LOL, no doubt. Wild animals are just that…… wild.
Just at the end of the lane where it meets the hyway,the County
put up signs for a deer crossing.There were so many deer killed there I ask them to
move the crossing a few miles on down the road. [:?….
Alfred
Reblogged this on Climate Ponderings.
ROFL so hard my side hurts!
Wait for it: CO2, or Sequester, or Conservatives, to blame for increasing deer aggression.
You wicked humans you killed Bambi’s mom!
Yep, she sure tasted good.
From the warehouse of things I don’t get. Bambi was male. Why are all Bambi’s in the real world female, and strippers?
Sounds like you know of a “real world” I have yet to investigate.
Oh Deer – So So funny!
My wife had just shown me this email 15 min ago… To funny!
Had to reflect on Ray Stevens “Mississippi Squirrel Revival”
Sorry just got back from Branson, stuck in the past.
No need to keep it to ourselves………
Thanks
That’s why the best thing you can do to a squirrel is road kill.
Jim
A car evens the odds as well – but it costs a lot more than a lead bullet.
I’ve never had much success throwing lead bullets at squirrels. The devices that make lead bullets more efficient at squirrel removal, are both hard to find and expensive (thanks to Obama). I already own several vehicles and any squirrel foolish enough to cross my path is . . . pretty safe.
Jim