UNITED KINGDOM -- A Sussex animal charity has issued a warning about discarded baler twine after a dramatic deer rescue today at Hellingly in East Sussex.
Volunteer rescuers from East Sussex Wildlife Rescue & Ambulance Service (WRAS) jumped into their ambulance after receiving a call about a Fallow Deer buck with full palmate antlers caught in baler twine and a barbed wire fence.
Rescuers Trevor Weeks MBE his partner Kathy Martyn, both from Uckfield, and rescuers Chris Riddington from Eastbourne attended on site.
"The rescue was not an easy one, although the deer was restricted in how far it could move, the fact that it was in a hedge made our rescue attempts very difficult.
"Our first few attempts to pin the deer to the floor using the walk-to-wards net did not work with the deer managing to get up every time. We just couldn’t get the right angle and coverage of the deer to pin it down. We had to take the more risky approach of threading the long net through the fence either side of the deer where we were then able to restrict the deer’s movement.
"From behind a small tree I was also able to grab on of the back legs safely and full the deer to the floor. From there I was then able to get the deer's head covered properly, pin the deer to the floor, and my colleagues Kathy and Chris were then able to start cutting away at the bailer twine." – Trevor Weeks, founder of WRAS
From start to finish the rescue took 15minutes.
It certainly felt like the rescue was going on and on, we struggled to gain control of the deer. The twine was also very difficult to cut being so tightly attached to the antlers. Your heart really races when doing these rescues because you know you are causing stress to the deer and just want to get it cut free and released safely and as quickly as possible. The poor creatures obviously doesn’t realize we are trying to help it. – rescuer Kathy Martyn
East Sussex WRAS is asking anyone walking, visiting or working in the countryside to keep an eye out for baler twine and pick up any discard twine and dispose of it properly and safely.
(ITV News - Jan 26, 2015)
Showing posts with label fallow deer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fallow deer. Show all posts
Thursday, January 29, 2015
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Husky chased, attacked and mauled to death deer at Erie Zoo
PENNSYLVANIA -- Erie police will file charges against the owner of a dog that squeezed through fencing on the Erie Zoo's grounds and attacked and killed one of the zoo's fallow deer on Monday morning.
A police officer shot and killed the dog -- a male husky about 5 years old, weighing roughly 80 pounds -- after it would not move away from the fallen 17-year-old doe and officers became concerned for their own safety because of the dog's demeanor, said Rob Culbertson, the Erie Bureau of Police's animal enforcement officer.
The dog's owner, who lives in Erie, will receive a summary citation for failure to control the animal, which comes with a $100 fine on a first offense, Culbertson said.
The dog's name was "Thor," Culbertson said. Police contacted the man who owns the dog late Monday morning.
"I don't believe he even knew the dog was gone, and he acted more shocked his dog would do something like this than anything else," Culbertson said. "We made contact and he's well aware of the charges coming."
Culbertson would not identify the dog's owner, who lives near Elmwood Avenue on Erie's west side, until the citation is issued and mailed, which could happen as soon as today.
The man could also be forced to pay restitution to the zoo equal to the doe's monetary value, Culbertson said.
Scott Mitchell, the zoo's executive director, said, "Our best guess is it would cost about $500 to replace her." Mitchell said the deer was one of the zoo's oldest.
Mitchell said zoo employees discovered the dog on the property, standing over the fallen deer, at about 8:30 a.m. Monday and called police. The doe was killed on the west side of the zoo property, atop a grassy, hilly area adjacent to Glenwood Park, Mill Creek and the Joseph C. Martin Golf Course that the zoo's popular train ride winds through.
Deer, sheep and other animals can frequently be seen roaming that fenced area.
"In my 25-plus years, we've never had anything like this happen," Mitchell said, referring to a zoo animal being killed by another animal that strayed onto the zoo property.
"When one of our animal keepers found the dog on the property, we called animal control right away," Mitchell said. "That dog was standing over top of the deer and wouldn't leave it."
Culbertson said that one of two police officers he called to the zoo for backup killed the dog with a shotgun. He would not identify that officer.
Culbertson said there was "no barrier" between the husky, Culbertson and the other officers, or other animals. "You just don't know what that dog is going to do," Culbertson said.
"He would not move out of that spot where he was," Culbertson said of the dog. "If we got within 3 feet, he kept eyeballing us. The safest thing for everybody, us and the other animals in that area, was to put that dog down."
Culbertson said the husky was wearing tags which identified its owner and showed proof of a rabies shot.
Mitchell said the dog "got through a piece of fence, near the golf course, on the zoo property. We had our people walking the perimeter, and they found a space where the dog looks to have gotten in."
That fencing was repaired Monday morning, Mitchell said.
(Erie Times-News - Feb 19, 2013)
A police officer shot and killed the dog -- a male husky about 5 years old, weighing roughly 80 pounds -- after it would not move away from the fallen 17-year-old doe and officers became concerned for their own safety because of the dog's demeanor, said Rob Culbertson, the Erie Bureau of Police's animal enforcement officer.
The dog's owner, who lives in Erie, will receive a summary citation for failure to control the animal, which comes with a $100 fine on a first offense, Culbertson said.
The dog's name was "Thor," Culbertson said. Police contacted the man who owns the dog late Monday morning.
"I don't believe he even knew the dog was gone, and he acted more shocked his dog would do something like this than anything else," Culbertson said. "We made contact and he's well aware of the charges coming."
Culbertson would not identify the dog's owner, who lives near Elmwood Avenue on Erie's west side, until the citation is issued and mailed, which could happen as soon as today.
The man could also be forced to pay restitution to the zoo equal to the doe's monetary value, Culbertson said.
Scott Mitchell, the zoo's executive director, said, "Our best guess is it would cost about $500 to replace her." Mitchell said the deer was one of the zoo's oldest.
Mitchell said zoo employees discovered the dog on the property, standing over the fallen deer, at about 8:30 a.m. Monday and called police. The doe was killed on the west side of the zoo property, atop a grassy, hilly area adjacent to Glenwood Park, Mill Creek and the Joseph C. Martin Golf Course that the zoo's popular train ride winds through.
Deer, sheep and other animals can frequently be seen roaming that fenced area.
"In my 25-plus years, we've never had anything like this happen," Mitchell said, referring to a zoo animal being killed by another animal that strayed onto the zoo property.
"When one of our animal keepers found the dog on the property, we called animal control right away," Mitchell said. "That dog was standing over top of the deer and wouldn't leave it."
Culbertson said that one of two police officers he called to the zoo for backup killed the dog with a shotgun. He would not identify that officer.
Culbertson said there was "no barrier" between the husky, Culbertson and the other officers, or other animals. "You just don't know what that dog is going to do," Culbertson said.
"He would not move out of that spot where he was," Culbertson said of the dog. "If we got within 3 feet, he kept eyeballing us. The safest thing for everybody, us and the other animals in that area, was to put that dog down."
Culbertson said the husky was wearing tags which identified its owner and showed proof of a rabies shot.
Mitchell said the dog "got through a piece of fence, near the golf course, on the zoo property. We had our people walking the perimeter, and they found a space where the dog looks to have gotten in."
That fencing was repaired Monday morning, Mitchell said.
(Erie Times-News - Feb 19, 2013)
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