Set out last evening just to have a look round to see what we could, quite a nice evening and looking for the couple of Roe does frequenting an area. The one has a single kid and was on a grass margin but due to the height of the wheat and barley unable to see what was with the other, so hoping to find out.
We have been leaving the Roe alone as they cause us no problems, not having new plantations or crops they really eat.
Travelling along a track my young friend did a very quick halt saying "There's a Roe in the wheat about 100 yards away". I hadn't seen it and it had disappeared, but after a few seconds it's head came up and enabled us to see it was a buck. It hadn't noticed us and it was now you see me now you don't for a while. We both agreed it was an old boy with quite strange antlers (later seen as the eruption of small points 5 in all) on various parts of the normal structure.
We watched him for half an hour in which he didn't seem to move very far. A strange one as over that period he only moved about five yards towards the track still going down to feed and popping his head up occasionally. We decided something was up and agreed if he came out onto the track I would take him. He appeared in the open slowly and I popped one in his chest which dropped him on the spot. We got to him to find he had a freshly smashed knee joint with fresh blood on it and was indeed an old boy in not the best condition. A quick gralloch by the small river, a handy place to wash, and within ten minutes he was in the chiller. A good beast to remove and allow a non injured buck to come when the ladies called.
We have been leaving the Roe alone as they cause us no problems, not having new plantations or crops they really eat.
Travelling along a track my young friend did a very quick halt saying "There's a Roe in the wheat about 100 yards away". I hadn't seen it and it had disappeared, but after a few seconds it's head came up and enabled us to see it was a buck. It hadn't noticed us and it was now you see me now you don't for a while. We both agreed it was an old boy with quite strange antlers (later seen as the eruption of small points 5 in all) on various parts of the normal structure.
We watched him for half an hour in which he didn't seem to move very far. A strange one as over that period he only moved about five yards towards the track still going down to feed and popping his head up occasionally. We decided something was up and agreed if he came out onto the track I would take him. He appeared in the open slowly and I popped one in his chest which dropped him on the spot. We got to him to find he had a freshly smashed knee joint with fresh blood on it and was indeed an old boy in not the best condition. A quick gralloch by the small river, a handy place to wash, and within ten minutes he was in the chiller. A good beast to remove and allow a non injured buck to come when the ladies called.

