Posted on 04/27/2010 12:40:33 PM PDT by mlizzy
Didn’t think about that. Deer are tough hombre’s, they could certainly put a serious knot on a cat’s head. LOL!
I did enjoy the video but there is a little black cloud hanging there in the overall picture and that cloud says that nothing good (except this video) is going to come of this in the long haul. Nothing more beautiful than a graceful deer but needs to be in the wilds. Just as I think a Polar bear or Tiger is pure beauty but not so pretty in a zoo cage.
They are seriously destructive and the worst part is the herds are so thick due to lack of predation and hunting interest, the deer are starting to develop wasting disease.
We have a Cougar in my neighborhood that has been pulling down Doe’s left and right. My rancher neighbor found a very large Buck the Cougar killed last week that has people kinda spooked. As many deer as there are here for the big cat to feast upon, I don’t think we have much to fear...especially since just about everyone out here knows what to do if a Cougar is “sighted.”
I’m a hopeless sap for cute animal videos (and we are on our 4th Labrador, one of which was named Buddy like the vid); but I’d rather see them in the wilds than in zoos as well ...
I’ll see your hand signals and raise you one angora goat I taught to shake hands like a dog....:O)
Oh, they are beautiful dogs. I didn't realize they were so smart as well. What was your dog's name? We have a shelter save that I believe is mostly border collie, and she's smart as a whip, but, oh, so, so, energetic. I can take her on a quick-paced hour-long walk, and it barely makes a dent in her energy level. She needs frequent running off the leash and she wears our black lab down. She will respond to a couple hand signals; I really should work with her more. I tell my family she could be a TV star, and they roar, as she's sort of mischievous as well (chews, chews, and irritates the cats).
Thank you for the water.
love goats also. I was raised on a small farm and we had 13 pet goats. I milked goats every morning before catching the school bus. We had an apple orchard and some of the goats could climb trees. The apple trees were free of leaves as high as a goat could reach standing on their hind legs.
My dog’s name was Nikki Von Humboldt.
Milkers are a lot of work, they have to get milked weather you feel like it or not...(chuckles). I had one bottle baby that when he got older, I could let him out of the pasture and he would follow me around the farm...his specialty was the weeping willows by the pond...trimmed them up real nice..If I turned a corner and he couldn't see me, he'd baa for me like I was his mother.....
I was walking with him in the front yard one day when a car came down our country road and hit the brakes...we sure must have looked strange to them...but he was the only one that I could let out of pasture...some tried but after we put up the electric wires they quit trying....
We started out with 18 angora's and 5 years later we were up to 80 at the end of kidding season.Had 20 kids that season, several twins....helped birth quite a few. I had to sell the farm a couple of years after hubby died....I still love those goats...
Most people mistake Angora's for a type of sheep. They get sheared and thats where mohair comes from...Cashmere goats are quite interesting also...
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