Glad I was there to be able to take him before he suffered too much.
Hung up https://imgur.com/a/zaq4E
Hung up https://imgur.com/a/zaq4E
MouthBQ98 said:
Good on you for saving him suffering. Some coyotes are probably pissed tho.
ursusguy said:
Nice lion and landscape.
OutdoorAg said:
If that buck hadn't been a legal buck to take, but you took a picture of it hung up, would the game warden give you a pass?
cheeeseburger said:
@slick Your fence? Fence height?
FatZilla said:OutdoorAg said:
If that buck hadn't been a legal buck to take, but you took a picture of it hung up, would the game warden give you a pass?
I'd go with no. Not hard to hang a buck up in a fence after its dead for a quick picture. The GW will dispatch the animal themselves and likely would give it to you with the needed permit to posses it if you call them. Saving your tag and giving you meat.
That's what I was wondering.lazuras_dc said:
Assume his leg was busted up (broken/dislocated) or he was in poor shape, otherwise was freeing him an option?
lazuras_dc said:
Assume his leg was busted up (broken/dislocated) or he was in poor shape, otherwise was freeing him an option?
I totally agree with you... but because it is easy for me to call the GW, that's what I would do.Todd 02 said:
It's certainly in the FAQ on the TPWD website, but I haven't found a law or regulation that states as much. (That doesn't mean such a law or regulation doesn't exist.)
I'd bet dollars against pesos that the "rule" exists as a way to prevent shooting deer caught in fences that were specifically driven into the fences. It's likely more of a rule against shooting entrapped deer to discourage entrapping deer than it is rendering aid to a suffering animal. Guess that's where the innocent until proven guilty is supposed to come into play.
I believe I've read on here before the opinion that scavenging wildlife off of the highway (i.e. collecting a deer that's been hit by a car) is more of an issue of traffic safety than wildlife conservation.
Seems to me that we should respect the value of the animal (i.e. as a food source) rather than waste it.
Common sense isn't all that common anymore.
AgEng06 said:
Someone will correct me if I'm wrong.... but I believe that even though it's the right thing to do, this situation still qualifies as taking by illegal means (even if the deer is legal to take otherwise). I would definitely call the GW before shooting a deer in this scenario.
Eh, cutting him out with y'all standing on the other side of the fence wouldn't have been dangerous. A few cuts with wire cutters and the deer is down and running. And no way to know if he would have lost a hoof or not and even if so, there's definitely no way to know if it would kill him. I've seen numerous pictures of all sorts of animals missing feet/hooves/legs and they've been just fine. Animals are tough. Not saying what you did was necessarily wrong, but killing that deer definitely wasn't the only option. Fixing fence is just another part of land ownership.slickwilly107 said:lazuras_dc said:
Assume his leg was busted up (broken/dislocated) or he was in poor shape, otherwise was freeing him an option?
Deer was very active. Would have been very dangerous to try and free him. Plus, wire was so tight around the leg that it didn't come off when we cut it. He would have lost the foot.