RSPCA helps roe bucks.

Shame that roe suffer from post capture myopathy and are probably dead from stress by now
You would think that the rspca would be aware of that little fact.
They probably are but there's something far more important to them than the welfare of some animal..... PUBLICITY
 
I'm quite thick-skinned, so it won't stop me from asking 'daft' questions, but others who want to learn may be deterred if they think they'll be called 'cuckoo' six times over !

Sometimes it's the thickness of the Stalker's skin that is important.
My view is there is no such thing as a 'daft' question and it is my experience that the 'classroom' is always pleased that someone was courageous enough to ask it...
 
Please see reply to Farmer_J - And perhaps in future bear in mind that not everyone has been blessed with your wealth of experience. I'm quite thick-skinned, so it won't stop me from asking 'daft' questions, but others who want to learn may be deterred if they think they'll be called 'cuckoo' six times over !
Not being awkward or trying to belittle you in any way but you are a stalker as I see you were selling a .308 rifle. I would suggest perhaps some decent reading material on deer species and their biology and life cycles may be in order. That is the first thing I taught my lads and others fresh to stalking, get all the knowledge you can before you squeeze the trigger. :tiphat:
 
Not being awkward or trying to belittle you in any way but you are a stalker as I see you were selling a .308 rifle. I would suggest perhaps some decent reading material on deer species and their biology and life cycles may be in order. That is the first thing I taught my lads and others fresh to stalking, get all the knowledge you can before you squeeze the trigger. :tiphat:
Thanks for the reply - but I think I'll resist the temptation to respond !
 
Every fallow deer I have freed from fences has died, despite trying to minimise any physical contact. Regretably I now think it is kinder to shoot them.
Interestingly, I spoke to the owners of a small deer park, with pretty tame deer, who were of much the same opinion. However, I've also seen large herds of park fallow - to all intents and purposes "wild" - successfully rounded up and herded into a handling system and put through a crush :-|
 
Its physical human contact that stresses them
A bit like a human being captured by a lion a terrifiing and life threatening event when the animal is in fear for its life putting a bag on its head just makes it worse for roe.
Have taken veganary advice from a wildlife vet who says that all the deer species suffer from it but its a real killer in roe.
A new dropped kid may be tameable if it can implant to a human within hrs of birth but as they get older they become terratorial and young bucks have been known to seriously injure humans when they mature.
 
We have to say it is not a forgone conclusion that they will die. I have to drive through Knockando Estate to get to one of the forests I was looking after when employed as a Ranger. I saw two roe bucks tied by their antlers about 50 yds from the roadside. I pass the headkeepers house further on and stopped to tell him. He said best wait and see if they can come apart themselves. I was heading home late afternoon and they were still there. Both absolutely exhausted by now. I went back to the headkeepers house and this time we both went back to them to see if there was anything we could do. As I said both animals were absolutely shattered by this time and there was no panic when we went to them. The keeper looked at them and thought that we could give the poorest ones antlers a little pull and see if we could separate them. We did and it worked. We set the two bucks about 20 yds apart and left them to their own fate. I drove passed the next morning and there were the two bucks up and feeding, but one was at one side of the field and the other at the opposite side. And they were seen many times in the field but making sure they were not going near each other !..J
 
Wild animals are normally very robust, they have to be. Evolution has done them no favours if they escape essentially unharmed from a predator (us), only to die later from stress associated illness, it is illogical.
 
Wild animals are normally very robust, they have to be. Evolution has done them no favours if they escape essentially unharmed from a predator (us), only to die later from stress associated illness, it is illogical.
I agree, it does seem illogical, but it is what I have found after releasing fallow deer from fences.
 
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