Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Hidden in Plain Sight


Deer give birth to fawns anywhere between April and July.  The majority of fawns are born in June.
Newborn fawns tend to be a bit wobbly and uncertain of themselves.   Until the fawns are strong enough to make daily rounds, their mothers will find a place to hide their fawns while they go off to forage for something to eat.  A doe may leave her fawn alone for the entire day.  Part of this is a strategy to avoid bringing attention to the fawn.
It is not uncommon for the doe to wait until dusk before returning to fetch her little one.
Sometimes, a fawn will be hiding in plain sight.
Such was the case a couple days ago at the house in Akron, Ohio, where that girl’s daughter lives.  A doe plunked her newborn down at the center of a flower bed immediately below one of the dining room windows.
That girl sent me a few photographs she captured with her smartphone.
The fawn remained in the flower bed for the entire day.  Happily, the fawn was retrieved near full darkness that evening.


--Mitchell Hegman

2 comments:

  1. What a cute fawn. Did it come out of the flower bed smelling of flowers?

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  2. Haha. That's interesting thing, actually. Fawns don't have a distinctive scent early on. This is helpful in their hiding.

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