We are starting to be overrun by these guys:
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We have seen as many as seven deer in our yard at the same time.
Sure we have a big yard, but that is still a lot if you aren't eating them.
jtk
We are starting to be overrun by these guys:
Looking Out My Front Door.jpg
We have seen as many as seven deer in our yard at the same time.
Sure we have a big yard, but that is still a lot if you aren't eating them.
jtk
"A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty."
- Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)
Our city lot abutted a large wooded area that ran through our town. Every morning we had breakfast watching the deer, fox, turkey, raccoon and others from our kitchen window. Our kids preferred watching that than cartoons.
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Alas, the deer overpopulated the area and our city council initiated a bow season within the city limits to thin them out.
Last edited by Charlie Velasquez; 09-15-2021 at 12:58 PM.
Comments made here are my own and, according to my children, do not reflect the opinions of any other person... anywhere, anytime.
Here, too. I don't mind having some help keeping things trimmed.
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We have 5 Does and 2 fawns that stay around. We've been watching this herd for several years.
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We get some activity in our backyard too
They are fun to watch, especially when one sticks its nose up against the electric fence wire.
Have a lot of little ones around, also entertaining. Took this a few years back:
JKJ
My mom in California names the deer that eat her garden plants. None of them are named backstrap or soupbone.
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Out the back door at our weekend place. We can't have a garden there or much landscaping. The deer have destroyed most everything we've tried. I do like to look at them though.
We have three doe and five fawns working the fig tree out. Some sleep under it. We are now having a forked horn and a 5 pt showing up too.
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Sorry not the clearest but decent size. At any given time we have 10-20 who spend most of their day in our yard. Right now its 2 adult bucks a couple adolescent and 6 does, and 3 young
We have a couple rows of pines that have long soft needles that are about 6" deep so its a great laydown area especially in the rain/snow. We also have apple and pear trees. The only thing I think they leave for is water.
Trying to grow things like young trees or other foliage that deer find tasty has been a problem in parts of our area as well. There were no saplings, deer would eat the leaves. The local government finally engaged a firm using sharpshooters to thin the herds. I guess there aren't many archery hunters and firearms are restricted due to housing density and landowner resistance. "Why can't we get Bambi's mom to take birth control pills?" type of thinking.
In some areas when the deer population starts to over run the humans local animal control may institute a "doe season.""Why can't we get Bambi's mom to take birth control pills?" type of thinking.
My area is restricted to bow hunting. Not many of the folks living around here would want hunters firing high powered rifles every which way.
A tall barrier of chicken wire can keep them away from small trees until they get big enough to survive the deer.
jtk
"A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty."
- Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)