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Deer look gentle, but their design is pure survival engineering and it is full of surprises. I break down the deer “superpowers” most people never notice: wide-angle vision, strong night sight, ultraviolet light perception, and the tradeoff of weaker depth perception. We also get into their athletic edge, including huge leaps, fast swimming, and how hollow winter hair increases buoyancy like a natural life jacket.
From there, we move into the parts that feel almost unbelievable until you see the logic. A buck’s antlers can grow at an astonishing rate, and that growth can pull calcium from the body. I also share the moment that confused me for years: seeing a doe show up with a tiny fawn, then later seeing her alone. The answer is a brilliant protection strategy, because newborn fawns have almost no scent and mothers hide them in separate spots while staying away to avoid drawing predators.
Then we tackle a topic that matters for anyone who loves wildlife: what to feed deer and what not to feed them. I explain why “deer corn” is not a helpful staple, how it can disrupt a deer’s specialized digestion, and what better alternatives look like, from native plantings to regulated supplemental feed where allowed. We close with the bigger question behind “overpopulation,” plus the spiritual and cultural symbolism of deer and a simple ethical line I live by: compassion is an action. If this gave you a new way to see deer and your role in the habitat, subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review so more people can find it.
Listen to what the natural world has been saying all along!
By Carol King ButlerSend us Fan Mail
Deer look gentle, but their design is pure survival engineering and it is full of surprises. I break down the deer “superpowers” most people never notice: wide-angle vision, strong night sight, ultraviolet light perception, and the tradeoff of weaker depth perception. We also get into their athletic edge, including huge leaps, fast swimming, and how hollow winter hair increases buoyancy like a natural life jacket.
From there, we move into the parts that feel almost unbelievable until you see the logic. A buck’s antlers can grow at an astonishing rate, and that growth can pull calcium from the body. I also share the moment that confused me for years: seeing a doe show up with a tiny fawn, then later seeing her alone. The answer is a brilliant protection strategy, because newborn fawns have almost no scent and mothers hide them in separate spots while staying away to avoid drawing predators.
Then we tackle a topic that matters for anyone who loves wildlife: what to feed deer and what not to feed them. I explain why “deer corn” is not a helpful staple, how it can disrupt a deer’s specialized digestion, and what better alternatives look like, from native plantings to regulated supplemental feed where allowed. We close with the bigger question behind “overpopulation,” plus the spiritual and cultural symbolism of deer and a simple ethical line I live by: compassion is an action. If this gave you a new way to see deer and your role in the habitat, subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review so more people can find it.
Listen to what the natural world has been saying all along!