Dead deer

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Hilts

Original Poster:

4,461 posts

288 months

Saturday 19th March 2016
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So I'm driving along a 30 zone and I see what looks like a labrador in the middle of my lane, so I stop but it's actually a young deer. It's still alive with no obvious signs of injury but its eyes seem pretty vacant. I moved it to the verge but didn't want to just leave it there so rang the SSPCA and left a voicemail.

By the time they rang back the deer went into death throes and died. She said thanks for calling but it's unusual we get calls like this about deer. Would most folk just put it to the side and leave it?
Here's a pic of the dead deer, no gore but I put it behind a spoiler anyway just in case no-one wants to look at a dead animal.


anonymous-user

60 months

Saturday 19th March 2016
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Probably hit by a car and then went into shock.

Nothing more you could have done tbh.

Sad sight though. We get deer in our garden and they are wonderful creatures.

Mr GrimNasty

8,172 posts

176 months

Saturday 19th March 2016
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I hope it's in your freezer, awful waste otherwise.

227bhp

10,203 posts

134 months

Saturday 19th March 2016
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Is it true it's ok to pick up other people's road kill, but illegal to take home your own?


vinnie01

863 posts

125 months

Saturday 19th March 2016
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227bhp said:


Is it true it's ok to pick up other people's road kill, but illegal to take home your own?
Sort of.. You can take home roadkill but to take something you have run over could be considered poaching.

Hilts

Original Poster:

4,461 posts

288 months

Saturday 19th March 2016
quotequote all
Mr GrimNasty said:
I hope it's in your freezer, awful waste otherwise.
Now it all makes sense what the SSPCA said. biggrin

I don't eat meat so never thought of that but you're right, a freshly killed deer should've been put to good use. I left it right on the verge so someone probably got it.

mybrainhurts

90,809 posts

261 months

Saturday 19th March 2016
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Oh deer..

mybrainhurts

90,809 posts

261 months

Saturday 19th March 2016
quotequote all
Hilts said:
rang the SSPCA and left a voicemail......By the time they rang back
In case it happens again, they don't respond immediately unless you say ACHTUNG ACHTUNG...

Hilts

Original Poster:

4,461 posts

288 months

Saturday 19th March 2016
quotequote all
mybrainhurts said:
Oh deer..
You're slowing up ole bean!, should've been the first reply. You all right? wink

Bebee

4,696 posts

231 months

Saturday 19th March 2016
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It's sad but the vet doesn't want to know and neither does the park ranger, I get these on our land, and I love it but if you hit one or come across one that has been, there's not a lot that can be done if it's well fked up.

To think it's last sight was the colour of your shoes!

Edited by Bebee on Saturday 19th March 19:34

mybrainhurts

90,809 posts

261 months

Saturday 19th March 2016
quotequote all
Hilts said:
mybrainhurts said:
Oh deer..
You're slowing up ole bean!, should've been the first reply. You all right? wink
:wheeze:

Hilts

Original Poster:

4,461 posts

288 months

Saturday 19th March 2016
quotequote all
Bebee said:
It's sad but the vet doesn't want to know and neither does the park ranger, I get these on our land, and I love it but if you hit one or come across one that has been, there's not a lot that can be done if it's well fked up.
OK so no-one's there I know but what's the legality of just choking the thing out to end its misery? I did think about that but wasn't sure if it was about to get up and bound off.
Bebee said:
To think it's last sight was the colour of your shoes!
Probably gave the thing a heart attack biggrin

Edited by Bebee on Saturday 19th March 19:34

Jasandjules

70,421 posts

235 months

Sunday 20th March 2016
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If you have any friends who feed raw, they would be interested.....

Dand E Lion

404 posts

112 months

Monday 28th March 2016
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Hilts said:
Bebee said:
It's sad but the vet doesn't want to know and neither does the park ranger, I get these on our land, and I love it but if you hit one or come across one that has been, there's not a lot that can be done if it's well fked up.
OK so no-one's there I know but what's the legality of just choking the thing out to end its misery? I did think about that but wasn't sure if it was about to get up and bound off.
Bebee said:
To think it's last sight was the colour of your shoes!
Probably gave the thing a heart attack biggrin

Edited by Bebee on Saturday 19th March 19:34
Always useful to know who is licenced locally to deal with shoot maimed deer, if there are many in your area and especially if it is on or by a public right of way (don't be caught out there with a lump hammer)

kowalski655

14,884 posts

149 months

Monday 28th March 2016
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Looks like I missed out on a decent meal when I found a baby deer sitting in the road the other night-I moved it to the side,it was either dazed or injured as it let me stroke it & pick it up,called 101 as I didnt know the SSPCA number(they said they would pass it on)

Next time I will chuck it in the back of the car biggrin

fttm

3,831 posts

141 months

Tuesday 29th March 2016
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Hilts said:
Bebee said:
It's sad but the vet doesn't want to know and neither does the park ranger, I get these on our land, and I love it but if you hit one or come across one that has been, there's not a lot that can be done if it's well fked up.
OK so no-one's there I know but what's the legality of just choking the thing out to end its misery? I did think about that but wasn't sure if it was about to get up and bound off.
Bebee said:
To think it's last sight was the colour of your shoes!
Probably gave the thing a heart attack biggrin

Edited by Bebee on Saturday 19th March 19:34
There is absolutely no way on earth that you'd be able to choke a deer , only choice is either a bullet or knife .Witnessed an adult Moose dropped with a knife a few years back , which I never thought possible .

mybrainhurts

90,809 posts

261 months

Tuesday 29th March 2016
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Some Yanks are still hunting them with bows and arrows. Stumbled across a Youtube clip.

matty g

234 posts

204 months

Sunday 3rd April 2016
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One of my drivers once took a deer to a local vet in the back of his van that was obviously in shock.

20 mins later after being in a warm van. When the driver and the veterinary nurse got to open the back of the van. The deer was ok.

My driver however suffered a broken nose and black eyes....He'll leave the next one alone

battered

4,088 posts

153 months

Sunday 3rd April 2016
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It's legal to humanely kill an animal that's injured. I have done this for a rabbit and a pheasant. The pheasant I necked in the usual way. The rabbit I strangled. I decided that as it clearly had a broken back the conventional pull was going to be impossible and/or unnecessarily painful, and I know that stopping the blood supply to the brain will cause loss of consciousness in a few seconds. I suspect a choke (air restriction) is slower than strangling. I think you'd struggle to do this with a large deer. A muntjac, possibly. Cutting its throat would be possible but messy, having worked in slaughterhouses I know how far blood can go when you open a neck artery.

I found a roadkill deer one night a few years ago, took it home and butchered it. It was very good.