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- #161
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OK you damn dip shit's. Your calling these guys names because they let it go and you don't think it has a mother. If you knew what you are talking about you would know that the mother leaves new born fawns alone for their own safety because of scent. New born fawns have very little scent, but predators can easily detect their mothers from a distance by smell. Since the tiny fawn can't possibly escape a predator and the mother can't defend it she stays away so predators like coyotes, bears, wolves, etc don't find and kill her baby. She comes back every few hours to let it nurse and moves it to a new spot to keep scent down to a minimum. This the most effective method the deer have and within a matter of weeks the fawn will be strong enough, nimble enough and smart enough to evade most predators. If you don't leave it alone you are practically giving it a death sentence for multiple reasons. Unless the fawn is in trouble and clearly struggling for it's life you should back away and leave immediately so it will go back and lay down where it is hidden from view. If you really care about the fawn you need to leave it alone.