File Details
- Depositor
- Karen Dykes
- Date Uploaded
- 2021-12-09
- Date Modified
- 2021-12-09
- Fixity Check
- passed on August 08, 2024 at 14:06
- Characterization
-
Height: 2782
Width: 1885
File Format: tiff (Tagged Image File Format)
File Size: 15757826
Filename: 7144_pp_148.tif
Last Modified: 2025-05-05T23:04:39.241Z
Original Checksum: 4003d468c8d6bdafdc96e2a724d75b2f
Mime Type: image/tiff
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Transcript |
- The fawns grow rapidly and exhibit
a precocious development of antlers.
At 2 months the antlers are
1 to 2 inches or more in length and
at 3 to 3 1/2 months over [word crossed out] about a foot
in length. Normally they are
simple spikes but not infrequently
they have a small shovel.
The juvenile coat is lost at
3-4 months + replaced by the
first annual pelage.
M. Polk tells me that some
doe fawns breed during their
first autumn + give birth
to their first fawn when they
are just a year old
The oldest adult cow seen
by me had been ear marked
in 1937 - she had calved this
year. 12 to 14 is said to be
about the maximum life span.
Dr A.E. Parsild informs me
that the ideal ratio is about
1 ad [adult] buck (2 yrs [years] or so) to each
40 ad [adult] cows (yearlings or over). In
castrating fawns 7% [male symbol] left as breeding
stock is the rough figure used.
Moult:- Yearling [male symbol]'s + [female symbol]'s were ahead of
the rest of the herd + many were
almost clean at roundup.
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