jinman
Rest in Peace
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2001
- Messages
- 20,387
- Location
- Texas - Wise County - Sunset
- Tractor
- NHTC45D, NH LB75B, Ford Jubilee
I've often said that deer have no problem going over stock fences and I still think that's true. However, even deer do things so often that they become careless, it would seem.
Saturday morning I heard our driveway alarm and looked up to see the postman delivering mail to our house. He normally comes down the driveway when he has a package too large to fit into our box on the county road. This time he wasn't delivering a package. He came to get me to help him free a doe from a fence across the road. I grabbed my redneck tool kit (a pair of pliers, a pair of cutters, and a big screwdriver) and followed him to where the doe was hanging by her left-rear leg from the fence.
The fence is a field fence with two strands of barbed wire above it. I guess it's about 4-1/2' tall. What happened is the doe's left-rear leg had gone down between the barbed wire and the top wire of the field fence. Then, as she was caught, the leg worked like a lever to pull the two strands of barbed wire over and down while pinching her leg just above the hoof. I've tried to illustrate that in a simple diagram attached.
As I approached, the doe began to bellow so loud it hurt my ears and she flopped around, struggling to try to get free. I waited for a second because I didn't want her to damage her leg anymore or break it. The skin was torn and pulled up on the leg, but there was little or no blood and she didn't have a broken leg. If she had had a broken leg, I might have just shot her, but I didn't want to do that. I took my wire cutters and snipped through the top wire of the field fence and suddenly the doe's leg was free. She was laying inside the fence and I was outside, so I didn't think there was any danger of getting kicked. She just stood up normally and bolted into the woods.
That's the first time I've ever seen a deer caught in a field fence, but now I can say it is possible if they get careless and don't jump high enough. This doe probably saw the postman's vehicle and panicked causing her to misjudge her jump. I don't know if she'll make it, but I think we did all we could.
Saturday morning I heard our driveway alarm and looked up to see the postman delivering mail to our house. He normally comes down the driveway when he has a package too large to fit into our box on the county road. This time he wasn't delivering a package. He came to get me to help him free a doe from a fence across the road. I grabbed my redneck tool kit (a pair of pliers, a pair of cutters, and a big screwdriver) and followed him to where the doe was hanging by her left-rear leg from the fence.
The fence is a field fence with two strands of barbed wire above it. I guess it's about 4-1/2' tall. What happened is the doe's left-rear leg had gone down between the barbed wire and the top wire of the field fence. Then, as she was caught, the leg worked like a lever to pull the two strands of barbed wire over and down while pinching her leg just above the hoof. I've tried to illustrate that in a simple diagram attached.
As I approached, the doe began to bellow so loud it hurt my ears and she flopped around, struggling to try to get free. I waited for a second because I didn't want her to damage her leg anymore or break it. The skin was torn and pulled up on the leg, but there was little or no blood and she didn't have a broken leg. If she had had a broken leg, I might have just shot her, but I didn't want to do that. I took my wire cutters and snipped through the top wire of the field fence and suddenly the doe's leg was free. She was laying inside the fence and I was outside, so I didn't think there was any danger of getting kicked. She just stood up normally and bolted into the woods.
That's the first time I've ever seen a deer caught in a field fence, but now I can say it is possible if they get careless and don't jump high enough. This doe probably saw the postman's vehicle and panicked causing her to misjudge her jump. I don't know if she'll make it, but I think we did all we could.