Arkansas Game and Fish Commission
Wounded buck gets the best of Greenbrier hunter
GREENBRIER – Man versus deer is not always a one-sided contest in favor of
the human.
Ron
Shock of Greenbrier found himself in a second-best situation with a
confrontation with a buck on the third day of the modern gun hunting
season. The buck whipped Shock then ran off.
Shock, 63, was hunting near Cadron Creek northwest of Guy in northern
Faulkner County. A stand used in past years needed repair, so Shock passed
it up and used a lightweight lawn chair on the ground.
He spotted a good-sized buck with its head down, apparently feeding and
about 50 yards away. “I cocked my gun, and the buck jerked its head up. I
shot, and it went down. It jumped back up, and I shot again. The buck went
down again then jumped up and came straight it me. I started backing up
and stumbled over the lawn chair.
“The deer went after the lawn chair, and it tangled in its antlers.
Then it came at me, pawing with its (front) hoofs. It got me on both sides
of my face and my left arm that I was trying to protect myself with. Then
the buck ran off.”
Shock said, “That lawn chair saved me. It fell off the deer’s antlers
not far away, and I just laid on the ground. I was hurting. My son Danny
and grandson Michael were hunting with me, and we have a signal we use to
contact each other. So I reloaded the rifle and fired four shots. They
came to me.”
Bruised, scratched and shaken, Shock immediately concluded that he was
lucky in not being hurt worse by the deer. He said, “I’m not sure how big
it was. I think it had 8 or 10 points (on its antlers), and it might have
weighed 150 pounds. It was a pretty big buck.”
Ron, Danny and Michael Shock found the bent metal lawn chair but could
not find any blood. “That second time I shot the buck, it wasn’t more than
four feet away from me.”
Back at the same site two days later, Shock saw vultures. He found the
buck dead, with it having gone several hundred yards and across Cadron
Creek from where the attack took place.
The deer’s hooves caught Shock on both cheeks and on the neck. The
deepest marks were on its left arm, the one raised in protection. The
parallel marks were wide apart, indicating a good-sized hoof had made
them.
The behavior of male deer can change drastically during the rut, the
breeding season, according to wildlife biologists. Normally reclusive,
bucks often turn bold and aggressive toward other deer, other animals and
even humans. They have been known to charge vehicles on roads as well as
four-wheelers and even persons riding horses.
Deer in Arkansas are much more numerous than they were a few decades in
the past. In 1939, Arkansas had only 5,000 deer, according to Game and
Fish Commission estimates. With a statewide restoration program, deer
increased to a quarter of a million in the early 1970s and today the state
has more than 750,000, perhaps as many as a million.
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