| A love-struck buck ran out of luck a week ago.
The seven-point buck was killed when it rammed a 640-pound concrete
statue of an elk in the backyard of Mark and Carol Brye's home
in rural Viroqua, Wis.
Bucks often fight during the breeding season, commonly called
the rut. Dominant bucks defend breeding territories and female
deer by sparring with subordinate bucks. Antler battles sometimes
result in the death of one or both deer, but usually end with
the biggest buck winning and the smaller buck high-tailing it
out to another area.
Mark Brye, who owns Brye Plumbing in Viroqua, was still laughing
about the suicidal buck he found near his elk statue last week.
Brye said his morning ritual is to rise early and look out at
the life-like statue about 40 yards from his home.
"Our son and daughter gave it to us for Christmas four years
ago because we like to hunt elk," Brye said. "The elk
is a nice thing to see every morning. It looks pretty cool, especially
on a foggy morning."
Brye said he knew exactly what happened when he saw the statue
tipped over. Although they were about the same height, the statue
weighed at least three times more than the 180-pound deer.
He didn't realize the buck lay dead a short distance away.
"I could tell the buck poked the statue a couple of times
by the chipped paint on it," Brye said, adding that the buck
eventually rammed it like a mountain goat.
The buck apparently staggered about 20 feet and fell.
Brye claimed the buck with a tag from the Vernon County conservation
warden. He laughed at the warden's tag note: "lawn ornament
fight — lost."
Brye said the deer shattered its skull. The antlers were still
on its head but were dangling.
"The statue is OK, but the antlers broke off when it tipped
over," Brye said. "One side of the antlers is in one
piece, but the other side is in five pieces."
Brye, 58, is considering removing the antlers from the unlucky
buck and gluing them on the elk statue as a remembrance of the
strange but true story.
The deer is butchered and in Brye's freezer. The elk remains
on its side.
"I can't tip it back up until I get a whole bunch of guys
to help me," he said. |