Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

There is, however, a large group of states in which this species has been exterminated.  The states comprising it are Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, and adjacent portions of seven other states.

As if to shame the people of Iowa, a curious deer episode is recorded.  In 1885, W.B.  Cuppy, of Avoca, Iowa, purchased five deer, and placed them in a paddock on his 600-acre farm.  By 1900 they had increased to 32 head; and then one night some one kindly opened the gate of their enclosure, and gave them the freedom of the city.  Mr. Cuppy made no effort to capture them, possibly because they decided to annex his farm as their habitat.  When a neighbor led them with a bait of corn to their owner’s door, he declined to impound them, on the ground that it was unnecessary.

By 1912, those deer had increased to 400, and the portion of this story that no one will believe is this:  they spread all through the suburbs and hinterland farms of Avoca, and the people not only failed to assassinate all of them and eat them, but they actually killed only a few, protected the rest, and made pets of many! Queer people, those men and boys of Avoca.  Nearly everywhere else in the world that I know, that history would have been ended differently.  Here in the East, 90 per cent of our people are like the Avocans, but the other 10 per cent think only of slaying and eating, sans mercy, sans decency, sans law.  Now the State of Iowa has taken hold, to capture some of those deer, and set them free in other portions of the state.

Elsewhere I shall note the quick and thorough success with which the white-tailed deer has been brought back in Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and southern New York.

No state having waste lands covered with brush or timber need be without the ubiquitous white-tailed deer.  Give them a semblance of a fair show, and they will live and breed with surprising fecundity and persistence.  If you start a park herd with ten does, soon you will have more deer than you will know how to dispose of, unless you market them under a Bayne law, duly tagged by the state.  In close confinement this species fares rather poorly.  In large preserves it does well, but during the rutting season the bucks are to be dreaded; and those that develop aggressive traits should be shot and marketed.  This is the only way in which the deer parks of England are kept safe for unarmed people.

Dr. T.S.  Palmer has taken much pains to ascertain the number of deer killed in the eastern United States.  His records, as published in May, 1910, are as follows: 

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Our Vanishing Wild Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.