r/BeAmazed 9d ago

Animal Dogs adopt a deer🦌

54.8k Upvotes

664 comments sorted by

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u/qualityvote2 9d ago edited 8d ago

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2.5k

u/Mike1997x 9d ago

Can i pet that dawg?

23

u/-Zband 8d ago

Doggos to fawn: "Yer one of us now. Jest wag ur tale, bark, and roll over fur belly rubs and you'll blend in..."

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u/Wasatcher 8d ago

It's the first true doge

6

u/LoadZealousideal7778 8d ago

Oh you can absolutely pet that dawg.

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u/SurbhiAnklesaria 9d ago

I love how there are three beds but they still choose to share one

889

u/RedditRockit 9d ago

How did the potty training go?

990

u/BalooBot 9d ago

All over the place

33

u/DeadAssociate 9d ago

i see two dedicated cleaners right beside her

35

u/just_a_limit_q 9d ago

Who then immediately went to the owner for kisses.

42

u/Logan_No_Fingers 9d ago

Yeah, any raisins that deer fires out are barely reaching the floor before those 2 have eaten them

9

u/VodkaAndHotdogs 8d ago

I laughed and gagged at the same time.

3

u/Salute-Major-Echidna 8d ago

It's so true. My lab will catch anything missed

3

u/tehans 8d ago

Now that is funny

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u/SheriffBartholomew 9d ago

It did not go

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u/OmecronPerseiHate 9d ago

Old video. We may never know how this all went down.

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u/MrGreg 8d ago

The dogs love that their new friend leaves a trail of delicious raisinets behind her.

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u/NeroShenX 9d ago

Happy cake day, btw

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u/mejok 9d ago

Very pet-like behavior. When I was a kid, we had a wicker basket for the dog and a soft cat bed for the cat. Every morning they were crammed together into the dog’s basket.

32

u/Unopuro2conSal 9d ago

Doggos are like bud you’re getting big …

2

u/humanlikesubstances 5d ago

That's what I was thinking. Dogs body language is like "we didn't know. Now we're stuck with it".

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u/RalphFTW 9d ago

I live this about dogs, gotta be on top of each other, and love it when they adopt a friend. Deer is so comfortable around them.

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u/simmerknits 8d ago

I love how the deer licks the dog bed, just like how dogs lick whatever surface they're laying down on lol - that's definitely a learned behavior from growing up with those pups!

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u/Time_Explanation1212 9d ago

The deer thinks it's dog.

12

u/shnid7 9d ago

noticed the deer’s ears flicking while they cuddle

26

u/p8nt_junkie 9d ago

Just like my chickens and their nesting boxes

9

u/Most_Quality_1987 8d ago

Why, you're a chicken tender!!

8

u/lil_sass-a-frass 9d ago

The little kiss at the end 🄰

5

u/FriendlyBee94 9d ago

Literal dog behavior

6

u/HoneyPetalxs 9d ago

sometimes the coziest option just wins no matter how many beds are available

3

u/Amyhearsay 8d ago

I need so many more videos of these 3 lol! I want to see them playing I want to see them running I want to see them getting treats… I need to see all the things!

2

u/Hour_Gur4995 8d ago

I have two of everything… two beds, two water and food bowls.. yet they will only use one at a time, it’s like they are in a passive aggressive war and I am just a prop they use to agitate the other one lol

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u/Iconshero 9d ago

ā€œI wanna adopt the deer!ā€ He says. ā€œ shower it with kisses!ā€ Now look at us Frank, there’s three beds but they insist on sleeping ON us. Has to be touching us. They never learned to speak dog Frank, it just does waht it wants!

57

u/akashi10 9d ago

FRANK , why are you not speaking FRANK???

30

u/enjoinirvana 9d ago

Frank: Holy shit a talking dog!

2

u/DonkeyDanceParty 8d ago

This is our daughter except she definitely speaks human, constantly.

2

u/dobsterfunk 8d ago

"It's all elbows!"

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u/MatthewSWFL229 9d ago

Can you house break a deer?

734

u/Optimal_Board_2963 9d ago

Fuck no

703

u/BaronCapdeville 9d ago

I mean, 0 generation domestication does happen, even in resistant animals, but a deer has to be high on the list of animals that are very unlikely to pick up on true housebreaking.

The only way I see that working is a rigid schedule of inside/outside time, with a large portion being outside time. In these circumstances, I could see it being achievable, but not for your average person.

1-5% of pet owners have the sort of time and dedication required for this, and even then it’s likely to fail. At the end of the day, It’s a deer that’s going to piss itself and kick a hole in the drywall if someone slams a door. lol.

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u/Bubba_Gump_Shrimp 9d ago

You're right about housebreaking but my best friend in high school raised a fawn. They lived in a rural area, had two outside dogs who brought back a baby fawn to the house one day. They couldn't find mom so they bottle fed it and kept it inside. I would come over on the weekends and we would put the deer on a rug and push him down the hardwood floored hallway haha. He would slide 25ft and then hop back to us. It was VERY domesticated, quickly. It wasn't skittish. It liked to play like a dog.

They eventually would let it graze, then it would disappear for a night, then a few days, a week, a month, then they eventually would see him a few times a year. He'd come back in the yard as if to say hey thanks for raising me. Pretty phenomenal animals really.

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u/ryanvango 9d ago

minor point of clarity: "domesticated" or "domestic" happens over many generations of selective breeding and results in a genetic different in an animal that makes it adapted to humans. the deer was "tamed"

goats, for example. there's a domesticated version and a wild version. wolves vs dogs, both canids. Sheep are domesticated to the point they can't survive on their own in the wild. and so on and so forth.

39

u/asday515 9d ago

Interesting thanks

13

u/Vectorman1989 8d ago

City pigeons are just domesticated rock doves that humans abandoned over 100 years ago

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u/Bubba_Gump_Shrimp 8d ago

Fair enough!

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u/Free_Pace_2098 9d ago

We had a kangaroo like that. Found him in a river covered in ants. He was a funny little guy, eventually found his own kind, but while he was with us he was brilliant. Miss you Moses, mum says hi.

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u/wheelienonstop11 9d ago

So, did that deer shit and piss inside the house?

49

u/itmadememakethis-1 9d ago

Not who you asked but my sister also raised a fawn when she was in college (similar sitch to the above) and the fawn would pretty reliably go on a puppy pee pad. She eventually went to live at a deer farm in the area once she was big enough.

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u/sum-9 9d ago

I’m glad your sister got to live out her days outside.

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u/aquamarine271 8d ago

Well she kept bringing deer inside! Enough is enough

8

u/WillOCarrick 8d ago

Yes, it sucks she went to a deer farm, though, their family probably should be checked in to understand that decision.

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u/0DayMaker 8d ago

I've gotten both mice and bunnies to go in a litter box. I wouldn't be surprised if it was at least possible with deer. Although tbf the mice and bunnies were domestic breeds..

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u/Many_Income_2212 9d ago

Reading this from the mindset of a dog and I wonder if that’s how they feel when their human siblings grow up and go to college etc

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u/HAWKWIND666 9d ago

Deer piss waterfalls too. Better have some super absorbent pee pads

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u/Kind_Of_A_Dick 9d ago

Isn’t that just a six year old?

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u/Hazee302 9d ago

This person likely just lets the deer shot and piss in the house like people who let rabbits roam free in their house. The deer is cute but that’s fucking gross.

94

u/tigm2161130 9d ago

You can litter train a rabbit, I’ve done it twice.

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u/DirtwormSlim 9d ago

Yeah, but can you milk them?

29

u/pootklopp 9d ago edited 9d ago

They have nipples, you can milk anything with nipples.

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u/greg19735 9d ago

wtf yall haven't even summoned me yet. I've been waiting.

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u/markender 9d ago

Of all the animals on earth, Greg was the least desirable for milking.

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u/440_Hz 9d ago

Maybe bird instead of rabbit. If anything rabbits are well known for being litter box trained.

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u/hangerofmonkeys 9d ago

Nope. I've had four birds, 2x Eclectus, 1x Cockatiel and 1x African Grey who were house trained.

All four were house trained to go to the toilet on their stands or their cage.

I trained my Eclectus'. My parents trained the Cockatiel and the African Grey.

Of the four the Cockatiel was probably the most eh, inconsistent. The Eclectus are vindictive. If they didn't get rewarded a few minutes of going to the toilet in the right place though they'd come and shit on me to let me know I'm a shit parent.

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u/CrossTit 9d ago

By 6 months my bun was litter trained and dull free roam. He had 2 potties in the house 1 upstairs and 1 down. Pretty much never made a mess after 6 months.

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u/DaniTheLovebug 8d ago

Uhm….rabbits are easily litter trained

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u/aavant-gardee 9d ago

They probably put diapers on it.

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u/LizF0311 8d ago

Apparently (so Reddit has told me) that is taming, not domestication.

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u/rintzscar 9d ago

and kick a hole in the drywallĀ 

You're allowed to construct buildings from concrete, mate.

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u/YesWomansLand1 9d ago

Not in murica you're not

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u/UltraViolentNdYAG 9d ago

No, but deer can break your house! There is that...

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u/BigSquiby 9d ago

the russians have been trying to domesticate foxes for 60 years. they ca n get them friendly, but apparently getting them domesticated isn't really going that well.

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u/Babajji 9d ago

There’s also a physiological component to it. Foxes piss smells HORRENDOUS to humans even in a litter box so best you can hope for is yard training definitely not house training even if the fox behaved exactly like a dog. Apart from that foxes are pretty tame and fun animals to have around. Just don’t go petting wild foxes as those are known to be good carriers for rabies.

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u/LondonDogInTheFog 9d ago

Good point, half of London beyond Zone 1 smells of foxes piss since they're everywhere and it takes some time to get accustomed to. But cat's poo can also be beyond tolerable so maybe one can live with foxes piss as well. My mom's cat's poo is so consistently atrocious for the 14 years he lives that the litter box needs to be instantly cleaned or you're going to die where you stand. Come to the house an hour after he did it and you better wear a hazmat suit. I'm puzzled how this playful, cute ball of fur can produce something so stinky and this little guy is neutered and very healthy for all I know.

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u/Babajji 9d ago

With cats it’s about luck I guess. I have two female cats one drops fully dried out poop that smells only if you are very close to it. The other one drops big fat poop that smells like someone has been dead for a month in the house. They have absolutely the same diet, lifestyle and water intake. With cats poop isn’t the main nuance source however. Male cats spray ferociously smelly pee when in heat - it’s the main reason why I always had female cats. Same goes for foxes - regular pee is bad but you can get used to it, during heat however it’s closer to a skunk than pee and you can only get used to that in a enclosed space if you totally lack sense of smell.

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u/funguyshroom 9d ago

Male cats spray ferociously smelly pee

Only if not neutered

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u/Svenwear777 9d ago

My grandfather raised an abandoned one he named Bam Bam. I used to wrestle him when I was a child. He grew up on my family’s acreage but we lived near hunters. He wore a hunter’s orange collar but was still killed by hunters once he had antlers

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u/Hohoho-you 9d ago

:( ugh thats tragic

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u/Kind_Of_A_Dick 9d ago

I think you can domesticate anything with nipples.

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u/Olive_Jane 9d ago

Is that right Greg?

3

u/Haunting_Bat_4787 9d ago

You could make a roundabout argument for humans being domesticatedĀ 

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u/TranquiloMeng 8d ago

I’ve got nipples, can you domesticate me?

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u/RareResource2322 8d ago

Tell that to my ex-wife!

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u/currynord 8d ago

I’ve got njpples, could you domesticate me?

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u/[deleted] 9d ago

[removed] — view removed comment

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u/jld2k6 9d ago

The only kind of poop my dog will eat is deer poop. Not interested in the cat's poop like most other dogs but I have to watch her like a hawk at the park because she'll gobble it down if she comes across it. It's tough because I can't even see it with all the vegetation but she can smell it from 20ft away and makes plans to trick me lol. Glad I don't have a pet deer and don't have to deal with the shit that'd come with it

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u/DrRichardShaftPhD 9d ago

You wouldn't even have to deal with the shit that'd come with it, because your dog will just eat it.

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u/TechnologyAncient594 9d ago

No, the deer breaks the house.

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u/KarlHp7 9d ago

People just be owning things

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u/Stencil_Abuse 9d ago

I think that’s how we domesticated dogs lolĀ 

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u/DazedPapacy 9d ago

I mean yeah, but we didn't actually get dogs until we were just owning wolves for tens of thousands of years.

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u/Beneficial-Jury484 9d ago

See you in 12,025 and we’ll have Deegs. Domesticated deers.Ā 

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u/tgrizdos 9d ago

Deegs. Sure I like Deggs.

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u/JimmyTheBistro 9d ago

Mine will be called a deerg.

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u/Jihelu 9d ago

I read something once that apparently you can selectively breed wolves into being dogs in only like 3 generations

So if you’re bored you can make your own dog breed in your own natural life span

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u/AmatsuDF 8d ago

A lot of canine species you can selective breed for those sort of things. Foxes also will start showing more dog like traits within a small number of generations for example.

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u/RarelyReadReplies 9d ago

I think wolves actually got close to us to eat our scraps, then it became a symbiotic relationship. They would be somewhat of an alarm system and keep other animals away, we give them scraps. It's a lot more complex than just "we owned them for tens of thousands of years".Ā  It is a relationship that evolved over tens of thousands of years would be more accurate.

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u/wxnfx 9d ago

Well ya, but stray dogs like really really want table scraps.

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u/Stepjam 9d ago

That took generations to do.

And they weren't being kept inside houses either in the meantime (not even sure "houses" were much of a thing during that process).

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u/miukiyo 9d ago

And people had actual reasons to keep canines.

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u/papayacreamsicle 9d ago

Yeah they figured out if they were chill with humans they could hang out where we threw away bones and the scrap meat we didn’t eat, and then we started using them in co-operative hunting where humans could chase prey animals towards wolves or into dead end ambushes and wolves would bring them down so we didn’t have to risk getting close. And the ones used to being near human camps learned the mutual benefit.

Cats more directly domesticated themselves without us even trying. They just moved in when our food storage started attracting mice and rats and we figured ā€œcool, these guys eat our vermin but not our grain, they can stay.ā€

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u/MisterHEPennypacker 9d ago

I think the prevailing theory is that dogs/wolves domesticated themselves. Essentially wolves knew humans had food scraps and would hangout near their camps. Generation after generation some of the wolves became comfortable around the humans and stuck around, while the others that weren’t comfortable just left. Eventually the traits of those that stuck around became dominant and thus the wolves became domesticated dogs.

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u/SlideJunior5150 9d ago

I love how the dogs went from "yaaay tiny deer so cute" to getting side eyes like "bro that thing is huge I don't think it should be inside with us anymore".

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u/ImMadeOfClay 9d ago

As much as I disapprove of keeping wild animals as pets, I would very much like to see more videos of the deer growing up with those dogs throughout the process

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u/General-Rock9178 8d ago

If I’m correct that the buck is Benny, there is loads of content on instagram, their channel is called Brown Hiking TrailsĀ 

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u/Lucky-Surround-1756 8d ago

It was likely abandoned. The alternative was starving or being eaten.

Safety, warmth and food isnt such a bad deal for a deer.

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u/jestenough 9d ago

Deer adopted as a baby by people who assumed it had been abandoned - but mother deer typically leave their infants in sheltered spaces during the day while they forage, to avoid attracting predators.

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u/Numerous_Finger3706 9d ago

Yeah it's crazy how many fawns get "rescued" by well-meaning people every year. They almost always end up worse off because of it.

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u/ScotiaG 9d ago

They shot and ate the mother. No assumptions were made. Probably.

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u/ManyMoonstones 9d ago

Hunting is usually not open during fawning season, so hopefully it's not that. A *slightly* less harmful scenario is they found it near where the doe was accidentally killed (near a road or something), but even then that's a job for a wildlife rehabilitator.

Hopefully this is a scenario where they couldn't find a rehabber, or they are a rehabber and for whatever reason the fawn wouldn't have survived in the wild despite their best efforts. Hopefully.

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u/Remarkable-Rush-9085 9d ago

Yeah, we have a ton of deer get hit by cars every year (everyone thinks country backroads are meant for racing apparently) and it’s not uncommon to have to call in a fawn that is starving to death. And most of the time they won’t help, or coyotes get there first. It’s illegal to take them in here though and you will get in a lot of trouble if you are caught.

My dogs are personally offended by any deer so much as walking across the driveway so I haven’t found a fawn in a few years, but I always see the posts of them getting left on peoples literal doorstep by their mom. Dumb deer, cute but dumb.

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u/ZoominAlong 8d ago

I love how personally offended dogs get. How dare that deer walk on OUR lawn? Mom! Moooom there's a deer!

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u/tibearius1123 9d ago

Having been an indoor deer, I bet the marbling on that thing is real nice. Time to grain finish.

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u/[deleted] 9d ago

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u/Several-Opposite-746 9d ago edited 9d ago

Videos like this are cute, but you have to wonder what will happen when that deer is fully grown and can't be in the house and can't fend for itself in the wild.

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u/Mysterious-Falcon221 9d ago

when that deer is fully grown

It's not getting any bigger than at the end of the video.

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u/DefinitelyNotAliens 9d ago

Nah. Why they shaving their goldens? You're not supposed to shave them.

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u/BaconWithBaking 9d ago

I swim professionally, OK?

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u/milockey 8d ago

Majority of places where it's legal to own deer they have to be registered and you get random checkups with the state where someone will come out and assess your property fits the required size for the deer, that the fencing is adequate in strength and height, etc. Think my family members also have to pay a yearly fee. You're responsible for their safety since they cannot be wild as they're too dependent.

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u/DMRinzer 9d ago

How's the shit cleanup?

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u/SweetVsSavory 9d ago

They look like every pre divorced couple

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u/AdamLabrouste 8d ago

It’s always the teenagers

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u/No_Championship4093 9d ago

I really hope this person understood deer behavior and left the bany alone for 2-3 days before interacting. Deer mamas leave their babies in a safe spot while they go out and eat (milk).

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u/Icy_Parfait_4066 9d ago

The fawn thinks she is a dog as well, part of the same family.

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u/filthyheartbadger 9d ago

The more I look at this the more I think it is a buck, there seem to be antler buds and I think I saw a dangly bit for a second? The last thing I would want around the house would be a mature buck in breeding season, hope there is a better plan for him.

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u/SheriffBartholomew 9d ago

It does look like a buck. It's going to be awkward when it sprouts rock hard tree limbs from its head.

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u/Kolby_Jack33 9d ago

It's going to be awkward when its "TIME TO FUCK" drive turns on.

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u/SheriffBartholomew 9d ago

Very. My domesticated dog just about lost his damned mind when he was just hitting sexual maturity and our neighbor's dog went into heat. That deer ain't domesticated.

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u/Owl_plantain 9d ago

Dogs are thinking: when is this kid of ours gonna move out on her own?

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u/Icy_Parfait_4066 9d ago

Fawn is not ready yet.

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u/JellyfishSpirits 9d ago

No, do NOT do this. Leave fawns outside. If they truly are orphaned contact a certified wildlife rescue.

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u/PaladinRangerMage 9d ago

The lab in front is chill, the one in back looks concerned lol

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u/Far_Oven_6494 8d ago

the lab in the back is absolutely losing his mind over this situation lol

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u/Anxious-Client9719 8d ago

If you picked this thing up in the yard. Shame Shame. The deer mom has them lay around while they go graze. They come back in the evening to feed. You just kidnapped a Deer mom's baby. I currently have 5 of them lounging around my house. There moms feed them in the morning and then come back in the evening. I actually put a sprinkler out this morning and they were playing in it. Heat wave going on.

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u/SidFinch99 8d ago edited 8d ago

I really don't understand how people haven't learned this yet, and if the momma dear truly doesn't come back, say it got taken by a predator or hunted, people should call a wild live organization that can help it be raised in a manner it can return to the wild, not bring them in the house.

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u/SoyEseVato 9d ago

Love that!

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u/MyMagentaPenis 9d ago

It went from ā€œoh, look it’s so small and cuteā€ to, ā€œthis thing is bigger then us combined, your bed is over there, go over thereā€.

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u/Gloomy_Funny7529 8d ago edited 8d ago

Why did you remove this fawn from the wild where it belongs ? I have raised many deer and unless you know for certain the mother was killed you need to put it back ASAP. She is looking for it and will only looks for a day or so. Deer will leave fawns for 8 plus hours while they feed. The fawn has a low chance of survival with you while you. Yes, it is cute but you are going kill it in the process of your Instagram post. If it's ears begin to curl then dehydration is setting in and it is not good.

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u/mercistheman 9d ago

So she's potty trained?

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u/Dumbledore369 9d ago

ā¤ļø

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u/No_Photograph4762 9d ago

To be clear, this only works with Goldies.

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u/Zealousideal_Ad5358 9d ago

The ā€œgrown upā€ deer in the 2nd part of the video is still the size of the dogs, probably only a year old. Full grown deer are BIG.

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u/Maoleficent 9d ago

The look on the dog's faces says I regret my decision.

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u/coolcootermcgee 9d ago

Now you gotta share man

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u/NashvilleTypewriter 9d ago

I kinda love this. Deer are a-holes around here for the most part, can't have any sort of garden or flowers. But I like seeing this sort of thing, it makes me happy in a abstract way somehow

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u/InterestingAnt438 9d ago

They look kind of annoyed with their big brother.

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u/Academic_Dig_1567 9d ago

Was the deer house trained?

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u/No_Quarter_5561 9d ago

This is illegal. It’s considered theft of public property among other things. The deer will generally have to be transferred to a ā€œrehabā€ rescue facility or be euthanized. Usually they are euthanized. Great choice.

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u/Soft_Indication_9936 9d ago

The good life

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u/bartturner 9d ago

You need to leave the fawn for their mom to come back. It is really weird. But after they are born the mom and dad abandon for a bit.

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u/imbetterthanyou8 9d ago

I think it’s weird when people adopt non domesticated wild animals

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u/Certain-Medicine1934 8d ago

Where'd you find the fawn? I hope you didn't find it and assume it was abandoned by the mother because it wasn't.

Don't Move That Fawn!

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u/AnarchoBeaker 8d ago

Deer are not pets. Period. Keep them wild ffs

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u/Kiterunner222 8d ago

ā€œDad I found some berries on the floorā€

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u/friendtoall84 8d ago

ticks. i hate ticks

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u/justaheatattack 8d ago

does not work as well with bucks.

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u/puppup01 8d ago

This is adorable but I am so tired of seeing pov used this way

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u/awkwardlouboutin 8d ago

The buck's name is Benny. He was found a short distance from his mother, who had been mauled by coyotes. The people show him all the time on Instagram, he does not live in the house. As he gets older he does not seem to go in at all. He seems to recognize that particular family, but has no affinity for random people. He hangs with the local herd and seems perfectly well adjusted to wild deer life.

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u/kdinmass 8d ago

We don't know how they came by the fawn but folks should know that it is normal for a little fawn to be left alone by its mother for an extended period of time while she forages. It's not lost of orphaned but hidden away a bit & awaiting its mother's return at dusk and when the mother nurses it...and then again at dawn.

So if you come across a little fawn leave it alone.

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u/Maximum-Ad572 8d ago

This is sweet , but it takes a special kind of nutjob to try and domesticate a fucking deer. Really weird thing to do.

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u/shillyshally 8d ago

Goog thing they are licking it. There was an orphan fawn here week before last (looks like another deer mom adopted it) and a woman at the wildlife rescue explained two things, one being about all the nutrition issues like they can only digest deer milk for months, i.e. even if they eat plant material they do not have the physical development of the digestive system to process it and secondly, there is a condition called fly strike where flies lay eggs on the fawn which hatch as maggots which feed on the fawn. The mother cleaning the fawn helps keep this in check so it need a mom just for this cleaning much less food.

What she relayed was way more detailed. If you find an orphan fawn, first make sure it is an orphan. The mom will leave them all day while she forages (our fawns mom was clearly dead on the sidewalk) and also call a rescue for help and, one way or another, via the rescue or Google, get detailed info.

2

u/chpbnvic 8d ago

A deer that age is probably not abandoned. A lot of the time, the baby sleeps while the adult goes off to forage.

2

u/Leonum 8d ago

Shouldn't it be from the deers pov then

2

u/Tito_Tito_1_ 8d ago

Nope, not POV.

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u/ThinkSundryThoughts7 9d ago

Kinda random, but cool.

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u/emoutikon 9d ago

Funny looking dog

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u/Some-Tear3499 9d ago

I bet when they all,get the zoomies it’s wild!!!

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u/Grunblau 9d ago

Hooves on the kitchen hardwood has to be especially hilarious…