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Had a pretty close call with a dear Sunday
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arveejay
Had a pretty close call with a dear Sunday
Riding along, cruising the highway at about 55 mph, enjoying the ride when about 1 block in front of me I see a dear run accross the highway and I quickly slow down. Got almost to where he was standing, he looked me straight in the eyes, then darted back accross the road from where he came from. Had I not seen him cross the road and slowed way down, it could have got interesting but since I had slowed down, it wasn't that close of a call. Got me wondering, do you suppose when he seen me coming at him he thought how safe he had felt before crossing the road and when he felt threatened he decided to return to where he came from because he felt safer there?Tags: None
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tfb
Well, centre-punching a deer is definitely not recommended Who knows what these daft animals are thinking...
Thankfully you were alert even if the deer wasn't!
Mike.
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Forum LongTimerGSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter
Super Site Supporter- Apr 2005
- 15536
- Murray Kentucky
Several years ago my brother had a similar experience! Lucky for him he WAS in a car. In that case after the Deer ran back to where it had come from, he speeded up and the Deer made a U-Turn and plowed into the side of his car!
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tfb
Sounds to me like our equivalent of the American deer is the Australian kangaroo; same suicidal tendencies!
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Forum LongTimerCharter Member
GSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter- May 2002
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- The only Henniker on earth
Last fall I was crusing down route 202 in NH when a deer ran right across the road about 100 feet in front of me. I was going about 65mph. Scared me half to death.
Later that year in Pittsburg, NH, I was on the sled probably doing 50 or 60 when I came over the crest of a hill and had a moose just standing in the middle of the trail, facing me. I locked it up (good thing I had 144 studs on the track) and came to a stop about 20 feet from it. He didn't move for a few seconds, just stared me down, then slowly walked into the woods and away. That sure made me feel like I was less important than the moose- like he was just standing his ground and how dare I interupt his daily routine.Currently bikeless
'81 GS 1100EX - "Peace, by superior fire power."
'06 FZ1000 - "What we are dealing with here, is a COMPLETE lack of respect for the law."
I ride, therefore I am.... constantly buying new tires.
"Tell me what kind of an accident you are going to have, and I will tell you which helmet to wear." - Harry Hurt
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tfb
Ay carumba. The only experience I can think of that comes close to that, is belting along a country road in northern New South Wales (eastern state here in Oz) one dark night, and seeing some irregular white patches suspended above the road ahead of me. I thought 'What the heck is that?' before hitting the anchors and pulling to a stop in front of a Friesian (black and white) cow. Which looked at me, chewed its cud for a few seconds, and wandered off on to the verge to join all its friends who had likewise jumped the fence for the greener pickings along the road.
A moose, however, is much bigger than a mere cow...
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Anonymous
1. Several years ago I was driving (a cage thankfully) up highway 11 just south of North Bay. I crested a small rise and hit the binders as a bull moose was in the middle of the road. Off to the side was a cow, obviously dead. The poor guy musr have been in love for I ended up stuck there for 3 hours until wildlife officials showed and moved them! I know I wasn't about to ask him to move! 8O Take about a traffic jam!
2. Five years ago my now ex-husband purchased a brand new Chrysler Concorde. It was 18 days old when that deer literally ran into the car about half a mile from our house. We swerved to avoid it but it still hit the driver's side quarter panel, bounced off the hood and had a hoof crack the windshield at my eye level. Scared the devil out of me!
Unfortunately, we broke his legs and I had to beg an officer to shoot it and put it out of it's misery. After many tears, mercifully, he finally relented.
The damage to the car amounted to several thousand dollars. I don't even want to imagine how little would be left after a bike-deer collision!
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Re: Had a pretty close call with a dear Sunday
Originally posted by arveejayRiding along, cruising the highway at about 55 mph, enjoying the ride when about 1 block in front of me I see a dear run accross the highway and I quickly slow down. Got almost to where he was standing, he looked me straight in the eyes, then darted back accross the road from where he came from. Had I not seen him cross the road and slowed way down, it could have got interesting but since I had slowed down, it wasn't that close of a call. Got me wondering, do you suppose when he seen me coming at him he thought how safe he had felt before crossing the road and when he felt threatened he decided to return to where he came from because he felt safer there?'84 GS750EF (Oct 2015 BOM) '79 GS1000N (June 2007 BOM) My Flickr site http://www.flickr.com/photos/soates50/
https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4306/35860327946_08fdd555ac_z.jpg
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Dark Jedi
We lose 3 or 4 work pickups a year to deer in West Texas. (Ft Stockton) Loads of fun.
We tried deer wistles, which work great in Colorado... Texas deer actually crowd the road to see what that noise is.
We took them off.
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LW_Icarus
I had a deer run into the side of my '83 buick century, smashed my front fender in to the hood, and wasted the A and C pillars along with caving in the rear passenger door. had I been a couple feet behind where I was Id have had a deer in my lap. in ohio they get huge, probably would've been the end.
always remember that when you see one deer, there are generally more. when I got hit I went the next day and looked and judging by tracks alone there had to be 30 of em or more eating in the fields there.
our local police department uses bikes and has whistlers on all their bikes, claims it greatly reduced the bike/deer collisions. I am gonna try a set on mine as well.
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arveejay
Re: Had a pretty close call with a dear Sunday
Originally posted by SandyOriginally posted by arveejayRiding along, cruising the highway at about 55 mph, enjoying the ride when about 1 block in front of me I see a dear run accross the highway and I quickly slow down. Got almost to where he was standing, he looked me straight in the eyes, then darted back accross the road from where he came from. Had I not seen him cross the road and slowed way down, it could have got interesting but since I had slowed down, it wasn't that close of a call. Got me wondering, do you suppose when he seen me coming at him he thought how safe he had felt before crossing the road and when he felt threatened he decided to return to where he came from because he felt safer there?
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JohnnyV
Im gonna go with the suicide idea. When deer get sick and are going to die or are afraid of dying from hunters they decide to take their own lives. He just didnt think you were a big enough vehicle to get the job done. He went back again to wait for a semi!
Tell me if this holds true for motorcycling. You shouldn't swerve to avoid hitting a deer in your car. At highway speeds slowing down to reduce the impact is your best option.
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Anonymous
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Originally posted by JohnnyVIm gonna go with the suicide idea. When deer get sick and are going to die or are afraid of dying from hunters they decide to take their own lives. He just didnt think you were a big enough vehicle to get the job done. He went back again to wait for a semi!
Tell me if this holds true for motorcycling. You shouldn't swerve to avoid hitting a deer in your car. At highway speeds slowing down to reduce the impact is your best option.'84 GS750EF (Oct 2015 BOM) '79 GS1000N (June 2007 BOM) My Flickr site http://www.flickr.com/photos/soates50/
https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4306/35860327946_08fdd555ac_z.jpg
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ZacharyB
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