I was out checking livestock water troughs yesterday when I
spotted a newborn fawn right by the ranch road.
It did not even raise its head as I watched it for a moment. The camouflage spotted pattern was almost
perfect except it lay on a patch of green making it visible to me. The sighting reminded me that I needed to
post a warning about touching these little fawns. This is the time of year that
people come across these beautiful little creatures and want to pick them up or
feel they are abandoned and think they are saving them. Do not touch it, if you get your scent on it
the doe may not take it back when she returns.
Deer bond based on smell and if that smell is strange she may not accept
the young deer as her own.
Not only are fawns found out in the countryside but also in
city neighborhoods, parks and back yards as we encroach into their habitat with
housing developments. In Suburbia the deer are quite at home with living on the
forage found in large yards and greenbelts. Several generations have been
raised among the houses and traffic and thus it is normal for them. What is not
normal are the numbers of fawns that are picked up by well-meaning souls that
find them laying in the yard or on the edge of a walking trail. A doe
will place her fawn somewhere she feels it is secure and go off to feed. She
will later return to check the fawn and nurse it as needed. So many city folks
that run across these fawns think they are abandoned or the mother is dead and
take them. Not being equipped nor trained in raising deer they either have to
get help or try to raise it themselves. Many cannot get the little fawn to
nurse or give it the wrong kind of milk and start it towards a cruel death even
though they had good intentions. Rehabbers in our area have an overabundance of
whitetail fawns they are raising because of the well-intentioned people that
have picked them up.
Remember that if you find a fawn leave it where it is unless
it is covered by fire ants or is actually in real danger. Do not get your scent
on it. The doe will return and retrieve her fawn later. In my almost seven
decades of being in the outdoors I have only removed two fawns from the
wild. One was completely covered in fire
ants including in the nose and eyes. The
other I took away from a dog carrying it down the side of the highway. If you
really think it is abandoned come back and check on it later or watch for the
mother in the area. Ninety-nine percent of the time the doe will come back
unless injured or killed. It is illegal for you to possess a white-tailed fawn
in Texas so if it truly needs help you should go to the Texas Parks and
Wildlife website and locate a licensed rehabber in your area or call the local
game warden. They will take the fawn and give it a chance to survive. Feel free
to observe the beautiful wildlife of Texas, but do it from a distance.
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