Fawn Injured By Hit-And-Run Driver Receiving Healing Care

Fawn Injured By Hit-And-Run Driver Receiving Healing Care

BY CLAIRE GALOFARO/Bristol Herald Courier

The rescued fawn lies in a basket Friday as it awaits transport to Nickelsville, Va., for rehabilitation and eventual release back into the wild.

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BY CLAIRE GALOFARO
BRISTOL HERALD COURIER

BRISTOL, Va. – A spotted, 5-week-old deer got off to a rough start Friday: While strolling a lonely stretch of Stagecoach Road with his mother about 8:30 a.m., a car plowed him over. The driver who hit him just kept going.

But a good Samaritan saw the accident, called it in and waited by the young fawn’s side until the cavalry came.

Lucky for the fawn, the cavalry happened to be Bristol Virginia Animal Control Officer Lisa Holly.

“He was laying out in the middle of the road, near death,” Holly said. “I thought we would have to put him down on scene. Normally, we probably would have shot him.”

But as Holly wrapped him in a blanket to move him to the shoulder, he started coming back to life.

“I was close to crying,” she said. “He was such an awkward, bendy little thing with long, spindly legs. It broke my heart. But, then he got more alert, started moving around.”

The fawn, a spitting image of Bambi, weighed around 10 pounds, she guessed, and was just a couple feet long. His only obvious injuries were little cuts on his face and legs. It is unknown if his mother was injured; she ran from the scene, although Holly suspected that she was watching from the trees.

Determined to save the fawn, who couldn’t walk, Holly packed him in the truck and took him to the Jones Animal Hospital for treatment.

Then the question became where he would go for long-term rehabilitation.

The hospital called Alanna Dingus, a Nickelsville, Va.-based wildlife rehabilitation specialist who agreed to take him in and nurse him back to health.

Dingus and Holly plotted a fawn-exchange for 6:20 p.m.

Holly, off-duty since 4 p.m., drove her personal red sports car to the meeting, with the deer nestled in a crate in the back. The women parked next to each other, petting the deer and smiling for photos. Then Dingus put him in her minivan and drove him to his new home.

Dingus said she would start by keeping him in a small pen and feeding him by bottle. With time, he’ll be able to wander her woods on his own, coming back only for meals. Eventually, she’ll set him free.
“I’ll try to get him completely weaned by Aug. 1,” she said. “Then he can assimilate, get wild again before hunting season. By then, he’ll be big enough to eat on his own, run fast enough to protect himself and go out and get good and fat before winter.”

Dingus works at a veterinary hospital and saves wild animals for free in her off time. 

“It’s just fun, a hobby,” Dingus said. “I actually pay $10 a year to keep my license.”

The fawn is now in good company. Dingus is caring for two raccoons, a wild turkey, a couple other fawns, squirrels and rabbits.

“He’s got some head trauma,” she said, “but since this just happened, he probably has a good chance of being able to be back into the wild. We just hope he gets better.”

| (276) 645-2531

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by Switch on July 01, 2009 at 10:28 pm

bj1971
Man you get down real close and listen for a heartbeat or listen for breathing.  Pay close attention you will know.

Flag Comment Posted by Duke on July 01, 2009 at 7:45 pm

Mama2Ze

Since you only needed correction on the ONE error, I wouldn’t want mention that you need to spell check that “dear” that’s about to jump up and “hoove” you.

Flag Comment Posted by musherl on July 01, 2009 at 12:50 pm

Touchy, aren’t we? I figured I would give you something other than your $10,000 car to worry about. Have a nice day.

Flag Comment Posted by dadw5boys on July 01, 2009 at 1:56 am

Baby Boomer
Why not force Private Property Owners along roadways to install 12 foot fences.
I am sure the Insurances companys would go along with you in getting a laws passed.
I mean look at the Seat Belt Law. It only serves to limit the number of people in a vechile legally and there by limit the Insurance Companys Liability.
People still die in car wrecks while wearing seat belts even if they did not hit a deer.

Flag Comment Posted by Mama2Ze on June 30, 2009 at 10:28 pm

It seems as if there is a professor in the house….MY APOLOGIES MUSHERL.  It appears that you did not know what I meant, so yes, to correct myself…DEER.  Is that better?  You should be the spell checker for all the posted comments on this website, because 80% of them have several vocabulary mistakes.  However, since I take MUCH pride in the education I have received, I will correct my ONE error.  Thank you for pointing that out, if that was all I had to worry about while proofreading my comment…I would be a happy woman.

Flag Comment Posted by musherl on June 30, 2009 at 9:15 pm

deer or dear?

Flag Comment Posted by Mama2Ze on June 30, 2009 at 9:07 pm

I have to drive down Old Jonesborough Rd. every night on my way home, I see dear 3 to 4 times a week.  Twice, I have come EXTREMELY close to hitting them, having to almost RUIN my new car I just got in Jan.  I always travel with my three year old son, he loves seeing the dear, BUT I have to say, if I were to hit one…I would stop to check MY CAR, not the dear.  I would be so MAD at the $10,000.00 dear that I just hit, I would not think to check on it.  I would NEVER teach my son to walk up to a wild animal, NO MATTER the situation, the uninjured mother dear could be watching from a distance and attack me out of fear because I was walking towards her fawn.  Adult dear could be in shock over the hit, jump up and hoove me to death when I get within feet of them.  The thought that some of you would think this person was not compassionate is ridiculous.  I am a very compassionate person, but I would have only stopped to check my vehicle.  I am the one paying for the damages, not Bambi.

Flag Comment Posted by Duke on June 28, 2009 at 5:51 pm

Sorry to here that about Bucky…

Did the lady witness happen to notice if the person was texting while driving?  If only this had happened next week we could arrest them…..

Flag Comment Posted by mtncare on June 28, 2009 at 5:23 pm

This fawn’s injuries were more severe than first thought and that were obvious which is very common with many animals that are hit by cars..he had internal damage…if left beside the road it would have suffered in the hot sun for at least 2 days at the most, with maggots eating it’s flesh, if not vultures and other wild creatures.  That’s nature…but since this fawn was found, taken in and cared for it was able to receive medication for pain, fluids and finally to be humanely euthanized….lets all remember to have compassion-not just for animals but for one another and not speak unkindly for we are all magnificant creations of God.

Flag Comment Posted by thall on June 28, 2009 at 12:30 pm

Nobody has said they wouldn’t do the same for a human, but we are talking about animals with this article. I would gladly lay my life on the line for another human if it came to that. The thing is, people tend to watch for other humans more so than they do animals. As for the earlier comment that people don’t hit the animals on purpose, live out my road where you can watch people intentionally run off the road to hit some poor defenseless creature. That happens more often than what you think.

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