Posted on 09/21/2007 8:31:50 AM PDT by DogByte6RER
Bambi vs. the Bureaucrats
Six years ago, an Oregon man rescued a fawn and raised her as a family pet. So when the state seized the deer, with a threat of euthanasia, all hell broke loose.
By Winston Ross
Sept. 19, 2007 - Had he been a hunter, and had the mottled white doe that tumbled down a hill into his rural Oregon driveway six years ago been an adult, Jim Filipetti could have ponied up $19, applied for a deer tag and gunned the animal down. He could have butchered the deer the state now knows as "Snowball," mounted her head on the wall and moved on with his life.
But Filipetti chose to raise the injured fawn as a pet, spending thousands of dollars on veterinarian bills to treat her deformed hooves, installing strips of carpet throughout his house so she wouldn't slip on the hardwood floors, and feeding her a steady diet of sweetpeas, tomatoes and green beans"the best that Safeway had to offer," he says. After 12 months, the house painter moved her to a pen outside his home in Molalla, Ore., but she was still a member of the family. "It was like having a dog around the house," Filipetti says.
Filipetti uses the past tense because his beloved Snowball has been seized by the state, which was considering euthanizing her. The story has outraged local residents and animal-rights advocates.
Whats telling is that the neighbors didn't complain. To the contrary, they took to Snowball, stopping by to feed the tame creature on a regular basis. "Everybody's got a set of animals somewhere," says Geordie Duckler, an attorney with the Animal Law Practice, a Portland specialty law firm that handles livestock disputes, biting incidents and claims against veterinarians. "It's rural Oregon."
(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.msn.com ...
From the disease perspective it's not a matter of whether you can tame the damned thing. It's a matter of disease control. A deer population, for example, doesn't have veterinarians looking after it, and no disease control methods should something break out. You wouldn't bring a plague victim into your home, would you?
Sheesh. Do your own damned thinking.
Looks like someone got caught taking the King’s Deer again.
Larry: See the little deer, does the deer have a little doe?
Curly: Yeah, two bucks! Nyuk Nyuk Nyuk Nyuk.
I don’t know about where you live. But here in South Carolina, deer are a real menace. They are everywhere.
Every week I see two or three more deer lying beside the road killed by cars and trucks.
There has been discussion of putting birth control chemicals in deer corn to try and control the herd.
It’s a real problem here.
Saw “The Yearling” as a kid?
Thousands of suburban areas are overrun with deer. There are herds of half a dozen to a dozen deer prancing through my yard literally every day. The roads are littered with dead deer killed by cars.
Not only do local governments do little or nothing about this, if you tried to control these populations yourself they'd come arrest you.
We're supposed to believe that turning a blind eye to millions of deer running free through residential areas while coming in with the full force of the law to confiscate the same animal when someone makes a pet of it is a rational course of action to control disease?
Please.
Same problem in rural Iowa, where I was raised. We used to control the population by hunting them. I understand that the state has restricted this so much that they are a real problem.
Sheesh. Do your own damned thinking.
Deers spread brucellosis to domesticated animals such as cattle. Why are you against treating diseases in deer populations? I just am trying to understand your thinking, I believe that I have a very clear head on this issue and I believe you are insulting me out of desperation.
lol Good thing I came in from the garden...the heat must have gotten to me. I clicked on this thread hoping to see pictures of the Doe Man!!!! HAHAHA
You try that ... get back to us and tell us how it went.
Common sense says: don't do things you'll regret later.
Hmmm... can we say give ‘em a little power and it goes to their heads?
It sure is nice to have government to stop us from making “mistakes”.
So what’s your solution to keeping the deer out of my beef pasture? Deer are going to be, and are, in contact with our domesticated animals constantly.
I guess the guy in this article is regreting it now. I guess you must be a typical liberal who see no solution to any problem. Take a healthy deer away from someone who takes loving care of it, because you know best.
Bwahahahahahaaaa!!!! And you called me desperate! Points off, because you forgot to tell me to "go back to DU."
You will no doubt simply have forgotten that I DID provide a solution to this particular problem.
What RANT, I don’t see no steenking RANT, I see the BIBLE of how not to be a typical bureaucrat.
1. It’s generally bad for the health of the animal in question. Not this time, perhaps, but generally, because most people don’t know how to take care of the needs of a wild animal.
...any more than many know how to care for their own children, however it is no ones business but there own in a Constitutional sense therefor I disagree with your ideas, especially the petting zoo.
And in 2005, state officials discovered a black bear in the home of a Roseburg man. The bear had been living there for years, it turns out, eating people food, even sleeping in a bed made for humans.
Now THIS I'd like to see.
As far as worried about diseases this animal may have, why not test it and see? If the doe is not going anywhere what's the harm in it?
Well, you said put it in a petting zoo, which was a fine idea.
Except what’s the difference from the deer living domesticated in a petting zoo, and the deer living domesticated at the guy’s house?
Other than the fact that you want to discourage others from trying to raise their own deer in their homes?
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