View Full Version : How's This For Frightening?
http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=16306772
It could just as easily happen on a bicycle.
Tri Girl
08-29-2007, 06:06 PM
:eek: Yikes!
Xrayted
08-29-2007, 06:09 PM
Woah! He went right over the guy's head! :eek: :cool:
Trekhawk
08-29-2007, 08:19 PM
YIKES:eek: :eek:
Make for a great drinking story with your mates....hmm thats if they believe you.:D
KnottedYet
08-29-2007, 09:02 PM
Wow! I just remember the advice EVERYONE gave me about deer: hold your line. If that means hit the deer, then "hit" the deer. They move fast (and jump, holy toledo!) and if you try to swerve you are more likely to hit them.
Hold your line. "hit" the deer. Slow down if you can.
Starfish
08-29-2007, 09:39 PM
This is something I have to deal with worrying about coming down from Hurricane Ridge. There are ALWAYS deer grazing by the roadside. They are very used to cars, and mostly don't move. But, they get more startled by fast moving bikes. Still, mostly they stay put...but not always.
Is it enough to keep me moving really slowly down a 20 mile, 5000 foot drop? No. But, sometimes I wonder.
crazycanuck
08-29-2007, 10:36 PM
Wowie!!!! Amazing, cool & frightening at the same time.
I wonder if a roo's ever done that?
C
GLC1968
08-30-2007, 06:29 AM
That's hilarious!
When we were riding in the moutains a month ago, we were descending this curvy road and as we came around a blind curve, three of us had to stop short to avoid hitting three baby deer (which are called what?). There was a mama and her babies crossing the road and as I came up on them (I was the third person, so the first two bikes must have already spooked them), they were kind of dancing in the road scared out of their wits. I screetched to a stop as quickly as I could and then swerved off the road away from the mama deer who was definitely getting super agitated. I've seen pissed of mama deer before...not something you want to tangle with if it can be avoided!
The whole time, DH was staring in wide-eyed amazement. He'd never seen deer up close like that before!
Bad JuJu
08-30-2007, 08:05 AM
three of us had to stop short to avoid hitting three baby deer (which are called what?).
Fawns. Did they still have the white spots on their sides? I think it's unusual for a doe to have three at a time, isn't it?
And BTW, yikes!
GLC1968
08-30-2007, 08:15 AM
They did still have white spots!
Yeah, I think deer normally just give birth to one fawn (thank you...I was having a brain fart!) at a time, so the other moms were either still in the woods or perhaps they had been killed? Do deer care for the young of other deer?
Tuckervill
08-30-2007, 08:26 AM
On the Katy Trail last week I saw two little fawns standing on the trail. The dog never saw them, thank goodness. They scooted off into the woods when they heard us coming, and then the mama (she was little--only about a foot taller than my dog) came bounding through. They were SO cute.
I don't think triplets are common, but it is possible. The deer population is way, way up, so the healthier the does the more likely there are multiples, I would think.
Karen
Bad JuJu
08-30-2007, 10:28 AM
Hey, I think we may have stumbled on the reason for the deer overpopulation--those crafty does are taking fertility drugs! ;) :D
margo49
08-30-2007, 12:16 PM
Wow! Like it had springs in it's legs.
Yeah, I wondered if a kangaroo could do that.
Starfish
08-30-2007, 12:52 PM
As a little aside, my brother saw a cougar do pretty much the exact same thing not too long ago.
He was in his car, and he said it literally came out of the trees on one side of the road already in the air, bounced once in the center of the pavement, and then was away in the treeline on the other side of the road before it even landed again. One bound. Normal sized, paved roadway.
Deanna
08-30-2007, 01:39 PM
A local cyclist did tussle with a deer, the cyclist didn't win. Hearing them rustle up on the hillsides I ride by is one of the reasons I broke down and got a cell phone.
Trekhawk
08-30-2007, 04:33 PM
I saw some deer on my ride today. I just kept thinking of this video but Im pleased to say they all remained pretty close to the ground and well out of my way.
I had a visitor a few months ago in my yard. I was mowing the lawn and had stopped to empty the catcher as I turn around to start mowing again there is a Deer a big one too. I dont know who was more shocked it or me. We just stood there staring at each for what seems like ages and then he/she turned started to move quicker and jumped over the back fence. You could not wipe the smile of my face.:)
CCinSC
08-31-2007, 06:12 AM
What gets me is the fact that the deer was running so fast the biker that almost hit him didn't even have time to hit the brakes. That's a good thing because he would have crashed for sure! I almost decapitated a squirrel yesterday-scared the @*&$ out me and the squirrel:D . We missed each other but being the newbie, I must admit-I slammed on the breaks and almost wrecked. Next time-bye, bye squirrel!:eek:
Starfish
08-31-2007, 10:01 AM
What gets me is the fact that the deer was running so fast the biker that almost hit him didn't even have time to hit the brakes.
This actually happened to me the one and only time I've hit a deer with my car. It came out of the treeline already just streaking across the road. It actually head-butted my driver side window...the deer literally T-boned me, shattered out the whole window, and caved in my door and doorpost.
Interestingly, if I'd hit the brakes at all, it might have come through my windshield instead. But, I was on the highway and there was oncoming traffic, so I was grateful I hadn't swerved or braked hard and lost control.
One interesting factoid was that I was wearing a business suit, and when I got home, I found shards of glass all the way down inside my pantyhose panty! :eek:
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