Fawn

/ Fawn #1  

TonyC

Platinum Member
Joined
Sep 1, 2001
Messages
705
Location
Monroe, Va
Tractor
Kubota 1997 L3600DT 4WD with FEL
Since we took off on an animal thread recently, I thought I'd post a photo of a little fawn that wandered up our drive this spring. I saw him coming and couldn't believe my eyes. He came up and plopped down under our SUV like he knew where he was going. I took several photos and it didn't seem to bother him. The vet said to leave him alone and hope his mother came for him. She never showed. The next day I planned to take him to a local wildlife rescue but I'm afraid he didn't make it. I wish there was more we could do but it's difficult with wild animals. They just don't do well, especially when they're that young. He was only here for a day, but he has a permanent place in our pet cemetary, complete with a small concrete deer for a marker.
 

Attachments

  • 35-68243-Bambi3mod.jpg
    35-68243-Bambi3mod.jpg
    23.3 KB · Views: 156
/ Fawn #3  
Tony
A great picture./w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif We had one born last summer within view of our back door. 3 grand kids were visiting from Washington State. This one survived and stay around until fall with it's mother. It’s always great to have these views of mother nature./w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif


18-30594-ronssig2.gif
 
/ Fawn #4  
Great Pics, Man I cant believe they let you get that close.
_________________________________________________
Take care, Jim

2001 B7500 HST 302 Fel R4 Tires
Semper Fidelis
 
/ Fawn #5  
From what I am told, when fawns are very young, they are taught (or by instinct) to sit low no matter what until their mother comes to get them. If you did not know better, you would think they were dead when you come up on one.

This past spring, I was mowing along the front of my property when I came upon a fawn hunkered down in the tall grass. Thank goodness I saw it, or I would have ripped it up with the blades. I have a bat-wing mower, and when I raised the wing up to avoid hitting it, it jumped up and ran into the woods.

I have attached a picture of possibly this same fawn 2 months later. It lets me get fairly close without running off. It must be getting used to me.



Regards,
Dave "Gatorboy" Hoffmann
Fallston, Maryland
 

Attachments

  • 35-68283-fawn.jpg
    35-68283-fawn.jpg
    186.8 KB · Views: 164
/ Fawn
  • Thread Starter
#6  
That's what I would have thought too, but apparently it's not surprising at all. The wildlife folks told me that deer that young instinctively freeze when approached. They won't move at all, sometimes unless actually touched. Nature tells them that they are camouflaged and their best chance for survival is to stay put! Another interesting thing is they have virtually no smell, except to their mothers. They told me about a video that shows a wolf in winter walking one foot in front of a fawn hidden in the brush and he never saw or smelled it. I thought that was fascinating.
 
/ Fawn
  • Thread Starter
#7  
Nice photo Gatorboy. Deer are such pretty animals. BTW, my last post was in response to Devildog's comment. I hadn't seen your post yet which basically says the same thing as I did. Every spring someone get's one with a hay mower or something like that. They just will not move. Everyone around here looks hard for them while cutting, but sooner or later bad things happen.

Attached is a photo I took just yesterday afternoon. I was out at the tractor to get some shots of my grill guard to send to william brown when I noticed this fellow standing in the woods right behind me. I just kept walking towards him taking pictures to see how close I could get. He was pretty comfortable having me around. As you can see, his rack is just coming in.
 

Attachments

  • 35-68313-deernicesmall.jpg
    35-68313-deernicesmall.jpg
    35.9 KB · Views: 155
/ Fawn
  • Thread Starter
#9  
Thank you Hillbilly. Here is a slightly different shot. I didn't take too many because my main goal was not to disturb him.
 

Attachments

  • 35-68524-Bambi2mod.jpg
    35-68524-Bambi2mod.jpg
    24.4 KB · Views: 155
TonyC
Great thread/w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif.Attached pic of the "twins".They have grown up at our place and are BIG fans of tractor projects.I've had to ask them to move out of the way traveling around the place.They just wag their tails and stare. Lots of fresh tracks in the project areas next day also.
regards
Mutt
 

Attachments

  • 35-68538-Dsc00025.jpg
    35-68538-Dsc00025.jpg
    96 KB · Views: 161
/ Fawn
  • Thread Starter
#11  
Now THAT's a nice shot. That's as close to a postcard as you'll ever get!
 
I like the pictures of the fawns,but that one of the buck,the way the sun is shining through,it looks like he striked a pose just for the moment.A "Kodak moment" to say the least.

Better put that on a calendar.
 
I've got some twins also running around. Sorry for the quality, I haven't gotten that good of a shot of them yet.

Regards,
Dave "Gatorboy" Hoffmann
Fallston, Maryland
 

Attachments

  • 35-68621-twins-a.jpg
    35-68621-twins-a.jpg
    32.2 KB · Views: 134
Here is a 2nd (not fantastic quality) shot of the twins.

Regards,
Dave "Gatorboy" Hoffmann
Fallston, Maryland
 

Attachments

  • 35-68623-twins-b.jpg
    35-68623-twins-b.jpg
    102.3 KB · Views: 129
Times like these I wish I had a digital camera instead of a camcorder. Put up a couple of feeders last year and had two does and three fawns frequenting them. This year I'm up to at least 3 does, 5 fawns, two yearlings, and a 6-pointer. The feeders dispense corn and "deer chow" (compressed alfalfa pellets probably) at preset times. I also keep water out in the summer. My herd is growing. Maybe it's time to harvest one this fall.

BTW, that was something I had a hard time getting used to when moving to Texas. Virtually everyone hunts over feeders or at least in their vicinity. There is a great deal of enjoyment watching the deer though, and the deer are in better condition.

18-33477-tibbsig2.JPG
 
Here is one of our bucks that I took this spring. A fawn will drop if it is in trouble and will stay there till its mother finds it to avoid danger. They usually only do this for the first 3-5 days. After 5 days it is next to impossible to catch one of them.

<font color=blue>Robert Turk Jr.</font color=blue>
<font color=blue>Whitetail Splendor Deer Farms</font color=blue>
<font color=blue>Silver Creek, NY</font color=blue>
 

Attachments

  • 35-69781-Mvc00021-1.jpg
    35-69781-Mvc00021-1.jpg
    123 KB · Views: 133
Here is one of our white doe fawns. Before anyone ask's it is a White whitetail and not an albino, it has brown eyes not red but they do look nice still.

<font color=blue>Robert Turk Jr.</font color=blue>
<font color=blue>Whitetail Splendor Deer Farms</font color=blue>
<font color=blue>Silver Creek, NY</font color=blue>
 

Attachments

  • 35-69784-Mvc00001.jpg
    35-69784-Mvc00001.jpg
    125.2 KB · Views: 131

Marketplace Items

2017 Skytrak 10054 10,000lb 4x4 Rough Terrain Telehandler (A59228)
2017 Skytrak 10054...
Lot of 4 10-16.5N.H.S. Skid Steer Wheels and Tires (A59228)
Lot of 4...
2015 John Deere Z950M 72in Zero Turn Mower (A59228)
2015 John Deere...
(INOP) ELGIN PELICAN SERIES P SWEEPER (A59823)
(INOP) ELGIN...
2018 International DuraStar 4300 2,000 Gallon Water Truck (A59230)
2018 International...
2016 Volkswagen Tiguan SUV (A59231)
2016 Volkswagen...
 
Top