Posted on 11/18/2002 2:23:38 PM PST by Behind Liberal Lines
Thomas Sheets never had a chance.
He was driving down Black Brook Road in Seneca Falls earlier this month when a deer jumped out from a soybean field and hit his new 2002 pickup truck.
Sheets, of 119 Whiskey Hill Road, Waterloo, said he has - unfortunately - become accustomed to this type of accident.
"This happens to me every year," said Sheets, who, on Friday, was still waiting for $3,000 in repairs to his front end to be completed.
Sheets is far from alone when it comes to car-deer accidents.
"This time of year is an abundant time for car-deer accidents," said State Police Sgt. Gary Gray in Canandaigua, partly because it's hunting season. Firearm season opens today in the Finger Lakes.
Car-deer accidents can cause injuries and serious damage to vehicles. On Route 96 in Macedon last year, a deer jumped through the driver's side window of a van and then back out through the passenger's side window, injuring a 6-year-old girl.
Gray, traffic supervisor for Troop E headquarters, said of the 150 accident reports they received within a two-day period last week, approximately one-third were deer related. These reports come from throughout the 10-county Troop E area, which includes Ontario, Seneca, Wayne and Yates counties.
Dick Henry, a big game biologist with the state Department of Environmental Conservation office in Albany, said there are about 60,000 deer-motor vehicle accidents each year in the state; nationwide, the number is about 1.5 million.
He said the state figure is an approximation, since only about 1 in 5 such accidents is reported. Henry said the current pre-season population estimate was more than a million deer in the state.
"We know that not all deer-motor accidents are reported, because we have people who call here who want to salvage the carcass for meat," said Henry, who also noted people are not required to report the accident.
Henry said that not all of these collisions lead to deer fatalities, and some animals leave the scene of the accident without suffering major injuries.
Marty Pierson, of Marty's Collision on Route 14A in Hall, said the average damage estimates can be between $2,500 and $3,500.
"There's a lot of front damage to the car," said Pierson, adding that the kind of car determines what kind of damage is done; if it is an older car, it's often totaled.
A recent news release from Ontario County Sheriff Philip Povero reported that such accidents result in more than $1 billion in insurance claims each year.
Pierson said some drivers use deer whistles on their cars to help warn the animals that a car is coming, but he doesn't believe they work. He said the new, brighter headlights help drivers more quickly notice deer in the road.
Gray said the best thing for drivers to do this time of year is to use general defensive driving skills, which include looking for "Deer Crossing" signs posted by state Department of Transportation crews. Those are put up in areas where deer problems have been reported.
Gray said for drivers to be alert near hedgerows and woods near the road, where deer may be feeding, especially at dawn and dusk.
Another tip Gray has for drivers is to not overdrive their headlights, meaning to not drive so fast that their headlights are not being properly used. For example, Gray said that when traveling at 55 mph, the driver cannot see 300 feet in front, which is the distance needed to stop at that speed. He recommends drivers slow down, especially near wooded areas.
State police also advise drivers to stay aware of their surroundings and quickly consider the situation - such as whether they are better off striking the deer than swerving and risk hitting another car or utility pole, causing more serious injuries.
This is technically true, but misleadingly written.
The reason for car-deer collision this time of year is primarily because it is mating season. The number of collisions caused by hunting is infintisimal.
I think I detect an anti-hunting bias.
You would think he'd learn his lesson?
I think so too.
Killing deer is leading to more deer/car collisions?
Is somebody throwing dead deer at cars? Or are they zombie deer?
Maybe the deer are moving because it's mating season rather than from hunting pressure? Besides, how many vehicle/deer accidents happen during hunting hours versus non hunting hours when the deer have no hunting pressure.
Semper Fi
I think I detect an anti-hunting bias.
Ya think?
Yeah, this piece is pure crap. Over the past few weeks, I must have gotten half a dozen press releases from different sources, mostly auto insurance companies, about the fact that deer mating season is here and that deer mating season means more deer/auto accidents...hell, the Air Force alone sent us a huge 4 page piece on this due to the giant deer population on their base. Not a single one of these fact sheets going out to the media even mentions hunting season.
Your detection of bias is correct.
"There's a lot of front damage to the car," said Pierson, adding that the kind of car determines what kind of damage is done; if it is an older car, it is often totaled.
A collision with a deer is not exactly a real big value enhancer for a motorbike, either.
-archy-/-
Those signs are no use at all, they still cross wherever they durn well please. I swear, it's as if the deer don't even read them!
LOL!! I beg to differ, my friend. On opening day of deer season, the pickup truck/4 wheeler/camping trailer traffic on a rural Arkansas highway can be downright DEADLY!!
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