This one does not involve a dead deer, but illustrates how sensitive the hearing of a deer is.
I had hiked in to a favorite logged off area that had yielded Mule deer in the past.
I found a big fir stump at the edge of a ridge with a shallow gully about 200 meters wide below me.
I sat down with the stump at my back so I could lean back on it. My position allowed quite a wide
viewing area, and the breeze was favorable as well.
After about ½ an hour, I was getting restless, and was just about ready to move when a mule deer
doe [not open at the time] came into view about 100 meters up the gully. She walked slowly through
the gully, and up the far side. I not sat tight, thinking a buck might possibly show.
No buck came, but the doe decided to have a nap, so she lay down almost at the crest of the far side
of the gully, about 140-150 meters away. She laid her head on her front legs and it appeared she went
to sleep.
I thought to myself: "I wonder how sound she is actually sleeping, and how well she might hear a foreign
sound?" I dug 3 - 25 cent coins [quarters] out of a pocket, and holding the one coin between the two others
in my fingers, I pulled the one quarter out from between the others, creating a metallic "click" [not loud at all
I thought.]
Immediately her head came up, and she looked directly at where I was sitting. I stayed absolutely still and
waited. After about 5 minutes, she laid her head back down. I waited another 5 minutes or so, and then
repeated the "click"
That was it! She got up and moved off fairly quickly, looking over her shoulder nervously. I am convinced
that had another human been at her location, they would not have heard that noise, but that doe sure
did, and she knew exactly the location it came from as well.
From personal experience, moose are just as sensitive. However, elk are noisy by nature when moving about,
and I believe they may not pay quite as much attention to a person in the woods. Dave.
I had hiked in to a favorite logged off area that had yielded Mule deer in the past.
I found a big fir stump at the edge of a ridge with a shallow gully about 200 meters wide below me.
I sat down with the stump at my back so I could lean back on it. My position allowed quite a wide
viewing area, and the breeze was favorable as well.
After about ½ an hour, I was getting restless, and was just about ready to move when a mule deer
doe [not open at the time] came into view about 100 meters up the gully. She walked slowly through
the gully, and up the far side. I not sat tight, thinking a buck might possibly show.
No buck came, but the doe decided to have a nap, so she lay down almost at the crest of the far side
of the gully, about 140-150 meters away. She laid her head on her front legs and it appeared she went
to sleep.
I thought to myself: "I wonder how sound she is actually sleeping, and how well she might hear a foreign
sound?" I dug 3 - 25 cent coins [quarters] out of a pocket, and holding the one coin between the two others
in my fingers, I pulled the one quarter out from between the others, creating a metallic "click" [not loud at all
I thought.]
Immediately her head came up, and she looked directly at where I was sitting. I stayed absolutely still and
waited. After about 5 minutes, she laid her head back down. I waited another 5 minutes or so, and then
repeated the "click"
That was it! She got up and moved off fairly quickly, looking over her shoulder nervously. I am convinced
that had another human been at her location, they would not have heard that noise, but that doe sure
did, and she knew exactly the location it came from as well.
From personal experience, moose are just as sensitive. However, elk are noisy by nature when moving about,
and I believe they may not pay quite as much attention to a person in the woods. Dave.