Added: 4 years ago
From: kcconners
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  • I have lived DEEP IN THE FOREST of the Pacific Northwest, thickets of Texas, now the foothills of the Appalachia ! I even have deer eating corn I put out every night

    I HAVE NEVER BEEN LUCKY ENOUGH TO COME ACCROSS A FAWN! u r so lucky!

    But I have seen BIGFOOT!

    checkout my channel RADIANTGHOST !

  • oh man..what a gorgeous place....aaaww your dog!!

  • I have a cabin and we heard a "erre like 50x and so we wanted to know what that noise was and my mom yelled I found a baby fawn!" the fawn was just so helpless!

  • "baby fawn" is redundant

  • @Anbercrombie You are correct and the titles have been changed. Thanks!

  • it's funny how peacefull fauns look even when they know they've been discovered

  • Interesting. I'm in Great Falls, Montana.

  • The fawn's like 'who the hell are you? Get away from my patch of grass!'

  • can you find dawn wild like this anywhere in san diego county? Anywhere to hunt down here too?Not that i would shoot a fawn(baby) but i will blow a males head off.A deer killed my dog a few years back while we were camping in No. Ca.I also discovered that male deer kill more people everywhere in the world then sharks, lions, bears, tigers, etc (any predatorial mammal u can think of) combined. Its the antlers, charge u n stab u with em head on, like running daggers.So i dnt like male deer, at all

  • soooooooooooooooo cute:):)

  • i live is south eastern Indiana and last year i was riding my atv through the woods about 1/8 into the the woods and came across 2 whitetail fawns curled up with each other i left them go and came back 2 or 3 days later and the were about 50 feet from where the were the first time i saw them i watched them for about a week while they stayed in that little thicket then one day i see i doe hanging around my back yard i followed it to the fawns and a way the went very neat experience.

  • can you pet it?

  • you are right, kcconners, but the best is not to touch them anyway!! just in case. touching them just afraid them, and move them also, so the pics should be taken on the spot the fawn is. well, it would be better to leave them alone. i'm not blaming you, cc! :) just saying to all the people what i think could be best.

  • hey i was wondering where you live because i am a deer lover and am plaining on making my own Fawn Rehabilitaion Center to help fawns. If you have any information on fawns please contact me!! Thank You

  • I live in Central Montana, and my place has about 100 deer per square mile. Both Mule deer and Whitetails. I got video of a fawn last night, and my daughters and I are going out this weekend to try and get more pictures and video. Will post them when I can.

  • lol prolly more deer than the human population

  • cute

  • The spraying doesn't harm the fawns. I do spot spraying with a backback sprayer. After 4 years, it doesn't take much spray in the spring. My farm is the cleanest for miles. Traveling deer actually bring in new weed seeds every year, so I have to touch up every spring to keep the heavy infestations from returning. The weeds are replaced by grass, shrubs and clovers.

  • So after spraying...are the fawns ok? We have to be so careful about our wildlife. I'm an avid gardener and have deer problems-but I would never use anything that would hurt them in any way....Good luck with the weeds. My problem is wild raspberries! Another noxious weed in my eyes...

  • what were you spraying?

  • I have some noxious weeds, mostly Russian and Canadian thistle, along with a weed called Hounds Tongue. Hounds Tongue is toxic to livestock (makes their livers fail), and produces those irritating seeds that stick to everything. Some call the seeds "beggars lice"

  • Jake the dog is doing a great job of hanging back. Every dog I know would be doing anything he could to be sniffing right in the baby deer's face.

  • NO ONE, under any circumstances, should be touching a newborn wild animal. The idea here is to preserve wildlife people! don't mess with nature, let it be! A female doe WILL abandon her fawn, this is a published fact researched by experts. Even if there are rare cases when a doe may accept her fawn even if touched, do not risk it for the baby.

  • i never seen a baby deer or fawn in my life but this year i do

  • Congrats on your appropriate action / behavior. Unlike some of the idiots who have videos posted where they handled and even carried the fawn into a residence, you left the fawn alone essentially undisturbed for its mother to look after. Some uninformed people think a fawn laying in the woods alone has been abandoned, where nothing is further from the truth.

  • That is correct, if a person took a fawn away from its hiding place, away into residence, the mother will return eventually and expect it to be there, only to find out it isn't. Then she'll begin to fret. It's depressing, isn't it? :(

  • I love the video, cute dog, Thanks for posting!

  • What did you do with the deer? I like your dog by the way.

  • I left the fawn where I found it and saw it's mother lead it up the hill a couple of hours later. Everyone seems to like Jake. He is a wonderful dog and doesn't hurt the deer. He thinks fawns are cats, I think, and he likes cats. Our house cats rub up against him, so our cats really like him too.

  • where do you live, what state? You are verry lucky to be able to nature up close like that. And your dog Jake is beautiful, you are truly blessed!! Thank you for sharing.

  • I'm lucky to live in Montana. Tonight during a beautiful sunset, I watched 25 does and fawns feeding in my new alfalfa and clover.

  • "It's me...Jody...It's me."

    Aww!

  • i hated the yearling

  • fawns are so beautiful!

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