View allAll Photos Tagged doe
Apologies for the repetitions -- know I often upload photos that are quite similar but I'm using flickr as a backup photo archive. I've lost so many photos over the years -- hard drive crashes -- floppy disks that got lost or misplaced, etc. -- that decided to put together a sort of -- backup -- backup -- photo archive here on flickr.
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Press L --- or click photo to see against a dark background or view larger size.
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"Why thou were there ...
I never thought to ask, I never knew;
But, in my simple ignorance, suppose
The self-same Power that brought me there brought you."
--Ralph Waldo Emerson
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This doe had her fawn stashed away for a very long time. I entertained myself with photographing the marmot while waiting for the doe to retrieve her fawn. Well, 5 hours later she finally did. I realized the fawn was in front of me the whole time hidden in the grass. It was sleeping and mom had to coax it out. When the fawn realized it was her mom, she jumped up, kicked her heels and ran immediately to get fed. She was huuungry! After her baby was fed, the doe went back to feeding while the fawn explored a bit. Not quite sure if flowers were for smelling or eating. Her little legs were still pretty wobbly. Taken at Hurricane Ridge Olympic National forest.
I didn't have the best light in Cades Cove. Early afternoon sun usually isn't the best time to shoot or even watch wildlife. I did like this doe who was slightly down the hill from me nonchalantly grooming herself.
I was lucky to find this doe and her fawn last spring and I must have forgotten to post this. The fawn was really curious but the mother paid no attention to us.
Hair - Doe: Ruby V1 - Browns
Eyeshadow/Lip/Lashes - *Booty's Beauty* [Lel Evo X BOM] Baybee Makeup V2
Shirt/Pants - 1 Hundred. Talk To Me Sky
White-tailed Deer (Doe), Indiantown Gap National Cemetery, Union Township, Lebanon County, Pennsylvania
White-tailed Doe was scooting across a clearing as soon as it sighted me from a distance...I cut a diagonal, hid in some trees and waited until she came out from the other end of a path. She looked surprised to see me. Round hay bales in the background.
...the Deer Whisperer
Best if viewed large. I've had major computer problems for about 2 weeks so haven't been in. All fixed now, nu computer !!
This doe has been grazing a Quadra property for some time. Yesterday evening she appeared with 1 fawn. We could hear another fawn mewing from the forest. She finally headed back in that direction and the mewing stopped.
The fawns are still young and the does don't bring them out into the open much. As time goes on and the fawns get faster, they will venture out on the edges to graze. Our beautiful world, pass it on.
Another shot taken with the 200-500mm. Thanks to the reach of these big zooms, I can fill the frame much better with little to no crop, so the quality and detail are much better. A very nice lens that, for me, is proving a worthy buy!
On leaving Bushy park, watching the Red deer rut, Kathy and I saw this small herd of Fallow deer settling down for the night in the long grasses, nicely backlit.
The doe had her tail up and had dashed into the woods, I was going to see if she would hop any more but stopped then I saw why when the buck walked in front.
I was at the pistol range practicing some shooting when I looked down range and out stepped a doe and her twins. They don't seem to be afraid of the pistol shooting at all.
Black-tailed Deer (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus) Doe
Emigrant Lake – Jackson County – Oregon - USA
The black-tailed deer is one of nine subspecies of the mule deer. It was first recorded by the Lewis and Clark Expedition of 1804-06.
Black-tailed deer live in the temperate coniferous forests along the Pacific coast. These forests are characterized by cool temperatures and lots of rain, but an overall mild climate. Black-tailed deer do not therefore migrate in response to seasonal changes, unlike some of the other mule deer subspecies. Instead, black-tailed deer often spend their entire life in the same general area.
This White-tailed doe or Virginia deer (Odocoileus virginianus) was grazing near the exit to Lake Springfield. She continued to graze but kept an eye on us in the rolling Toyota blind. The afternoon light high lighted the flowers and her nicely.