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Blind buck with slippers on


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I was out for an evening stalk the other night basking in the sunshine , which makes a nice change , when I noticed a buck feeding on buttercups in a hay meadow about 300 yards away. I had to crawl on hands and knees til I got about 120 yards from the buck , I was sweating profusely I can tell you !!!!

 

 

 

As he fell .....

 

 

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As I performed the gralloch I noticed he was blind in one eye ...

 

 

 

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He was also wearing his Aladdins slippers ....

 

 

 

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He weighed 48lbs and was in great condition but I think better off being culled !!

Edited by FOXHUNTER
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what causes alladins slippers?

these look worse than your buck mate

this was taken in doe season so no funny comments

i wrote about it on another web site but people had loads of theories

please tell the way it happens

thanks lee

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Edited by cassshantia
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I wouldn't hessitate to cull a doe out of season with feet like that unless she had dependants at foot.

Even then it may be for the best.

I always thought it was wet ground but shot 1 on the wolds this year(a yearling doe in the buck season I had seen a month earlier but couldn't get a backstop) on chalk and flint so made me think again.

Regards john.

 

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Edited by john robbo
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From my experience its down to two main things:

 

1.) Vitamin deficiency

 

2.) Too much protein in the diet

 

It would be one or the other,both these are proven reasons

 

You could argue about wear on the hooves but then that wouldnt make sense on harder ground.

Edited by tommydeer
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looks similar to what happens to sheep feet, seem to remember when helping m,y Grandpa on teh farm that all the sheeps hovves got longer in teh soft ground but generally wore away in teh hard ground in the summer. however there were always ones that it didnt happen to wan we had to take the knife and cut it all off.<BR>maybe one of teh farmers on here would have an idea or if noone on here your local farmer see if any sheep have the same problems

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do only certain breeds of deer get those, or all types? I've never seen that before but then I've only been around deer for 5 years.

I have also seen reds with this but only on one foot due to an injury where the full wieght cant be put down on the foot

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