<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123"></SPAN>[123]</span></p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="ich10" style="max-width: 46.875em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_ch10.jpg" alt="Deer in the Valley" /></div>
<h2 class="nobreak" id="X">X<br/> THE HOMING INSTINCTS OF<br/> WOUNDED DEER</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">In</span> these days one hears so much of the homing
instincts of animals and birds that the two
following authentic instances of deer, whose
habits are not so generally known as those of
some other animals, may be of interest.</p>
<p>Stalkers, and those who know the habits of the
red-deer, know well that a stag when wounded
will seek what he knows from experience to be
a haven of safety. Thus, if he has come in the
rutting season from his native forest and is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124"></SPAN>[124]</span>
wounded on other ground, he will assuredly make
for the sanctuary in that forest. So, too, if he
has been born and reared in a particular part of
the forest and has come to regard that place as
his home, he will struggle to reach it if wounded.
One interesting illustration of this has come
within my own experience, and another was
related to me by the stalker who was with me
on the occasion referred to.</p>
<p>I was stalking in a forest upon part of which
unusual conditions prevailed. That part which
was nearest to the lodge was enclosed by a deer
fence, but, owing to careful management, and the
introduction from time to time of fresh stock,
there are some very good heads in this part of the
forest. I always prefer, however, when I have
the chance, to stalk on the open ground outside
the fence, although it means harder work, as it is
the far beat and part of it is on very high and
precipitous ground. It has, however, this great
fascination—that one never knows what sort of
stag one may find there. The forest itself is an
exceptionally good one, and marches with several
of the finest forests in the Highlands.</p>
<p><SPAN name="SANCTUARY" id="SANCTUARY"></SPAN></p>
<div class="figcenter illowp52" id="i124fp" style="max-width: 44.0625em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100 p2" src="images/i_124_fp.jpg" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="pfs80">THE SANCTUARY, KINLOCHEWE FOREST.</p>
<p class="pfs80">By <span class="smcap">Finlay Mackinnon</span>.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>On the day in question I was on the far beat
and secured a good stag after an exciting stalk.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125"></SPAN>[125]</span>
After seeing the stag safely put on the pony in
charge of the gillie, the stalker and I set off
towards the farther end of the beat in the hope of
getting a second stag. Not far from the march,
on precipitous ground covered with rough
boulders of rock, we spied a good stag with a
large number of hinds. The deer were in an
awkward position, and we found that it was
impossible to get nearer to them than about
200 yards. The day was getting late, therefore
this was probably our only chance. The stag was
moving about and might very soon be over the
march, so that there was no time to be lost.
Getting quickly into the best position I could,
I fired, and evidently hit the stag very hard.
Directly I fired the deer disappeared as if by
magic. The stalker said he was quite certain
the stag could not go far. On reaching the spot
on which the stag had been standing when I
fired we found marks of blood, and had no difficulty
in following these for some 50 yards, by
which time we were close to the march, and in
full view of a large corrie and other ground, all
of which was in the neighbouring forest. We
saw what were evidently some of the hinds making
off across the march, but the stag and the rest<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126"></SPAN>[126]</span>
of the hinds were nowhere to be seen. We moved
a little farther on where we could get a view of
other ground, when suddenly there was a tremendous
clatter of loose stones, and we saw the
stag and some twenty hinds about 120 yards
from us. The deer stopped for a few seconds,
the stag looking straight at us, and then away they
went. We ran quickly to the point where they
had disappeared, and saw the hinds we had last
seen with the stag going in the direction which
the other hinds had previously taken, but the stag
was not with them. “He cannot go far,” said
the stalker. The ground was very much broken
up by large stones and boulders, and we both
thought that the stag must be lying hidden not
far from us. We were quite certain from the
position we were in that we could not have failed
to see him unless he had turned back below the
hill and gone into the forest from which we had
come. We noticed the hinds stopping every now
and then and looking back, as they so often do
when one of their number has been wounded and
is behind them. By following the marks of blood
on the stones we traced the course the stag had
taken for about 200 yards, but after that we lost
the tracks. We made the most careful search, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127"></SPAN>[127]</span>
the stalker went some distance into the adjoining
forest, but all in vain. The light was beginning
to go, and at last we decided to give up the
search, for that day at any rate. The stalker, who
had had his glass on the stag when I had fired at
him, said he was quite sure from what he saw then
and from the way that the stag was bleeding that
he had been mortally wounded and could not live
long. I felt very much depressed, for if there
is one thing that distresses me more than another
it is to leave a wounded stag on the ground;
and though I thought that the stalker with his
experience was right in thinking that the stag
could not live long, particularly as I knew my
rifle and felt sure that I must have hit the stag
somewhere not far from the heart, the fact
remained that one could not be quite sure what
had really happened. This was the last day of
the season, and I was leaving on the following
morning. The stalker promised me that he
would search the ground on the following day,
and that he would also tell the stalkers in the
neighbouring forest, and that if he heard anything
of the stag he would let me know. “I shall
certainly know the head if it is ever found,” he
said, “for when the stag looked straight at me I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128"></SPAN>[128]</span>
could see the space between his forks at the top.
It was a ten-pointer, I think; the points were
very regular, but as far as the head goes it is not
much to grieve over, for it was on the narrow
side.” “Still, it is a bad business,” I replied.
“If we only had had a tracker we should certainly
have got him without any trouble.” A really
reliable tracker is indeed invaluable on an occasion
of this kind, but it is only in a few forests that
dogs are now used in following wounded stags.
The noble deer-hounds which were the trusty
allies of our fathers on the hill have during the
last forty or fifty years been replaced in those
forests where dogs are still used by the golden
retriever, or more often by the collie, the two
dogs last mentioned having been found more
suitable for pursuing wounded deer. The deer-hound
was so high-couraged that he would not
bay the stag, but would pull him down or be
killed by him. A further objection was that he
would hunt by sight rather than by scent, it
not being in his nature to put his nose to the
ground, and it was therefore practically impossible
to train him as a tracker.</p>
<p><SPAN name="ALLIES" id="ALLIES"></SPAN></p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i128fp" style="max-width: 62.5em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100 p2" src="images/i_128_fp.jpg" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="pfs80">“THE TRUSTY ALLIES OF OUR FATHERS ON THE HILL.”</p>
<p class="pfs80">From the Picture “After a Hard Day” by <span class="smcap">Philip Stretton</span>.</p>
<p class="pfs80">By permission of Messrs. Landeker & Brown, Ltd. London, E.C.2, Publishers of the large engraving.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>I heard no more of the wounded stag until
the following season, when I once more found<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129"></SPAN>[129]</span>
myself in the same forest. I asked the stalker
whether he had any news of the stag. He said:
“That is a question. The stalkers in the other
forest never found any stag, but a very curious
thing has happened. About 20 yards inside the
fence, at the nearest point in that part of the
forest which is fenced in from where you shot
the stag, that would be about a distance of three
miles, the skeleton of a stag was found last April.
The head stalker on that part of the forest tells
me he is quite sure it was not a stag that was shot
inside the fence. I have got the head here, and
will show it to you.” I examined it carefully.
It was a good regular head of ten points, with
remarkably long forks at the top, and I thought
it looked a better head than that of the stag I
had shot, and said so to the stalker. He replied:
“It is the same shape, and I well remember noticing
the space between the forks at the top. Not
only that, but in April when we found him there
were no stags on that part of the ground and had
not been for some time; also by the bleached
condition of the horns, I am quite sure he must
have died in October or early in November, and
he could not have died a natural death after the
winter was over. And as to his getting through<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130"></SPAN>[130]</span>
the fence, at that season of the year stags have a
wonderful way of getting through a fence if they
want to do so. If he was mortally wounded after
he got outside he would be sure to go back to the
place where he was born and knew he was safe, and
depend upon it he would find his way back through
the fence where he got out. One can never be
sure, but on the whole I think he is the stag you
shot. You see the only way he could have gone
that day without our seeing him was out of sight
round that hill in the direction of the fenced-in
part of the forest. I am sure he was mortally
wounded, he had seen us; and after seeing us,
being wounded, he would go straight on, as you
know, so long as his strength would carry him and
he would go straight to his old home. They’re
wonderful in that way, deer are: I shall never
forget how I was taught that years ago when I
was out with the young chief at X.”</p>
<p>I asked the stalker to tell me the story, which
I give in his own words: “About twelve years
ago, when I was a gillie at X, I was out one day
with the chief’s son late on in the season, about
the end of the first week in October. About
2 o’clock in the afternoon we saw a Royal stag
and some hinds above the black shed, between<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131"></SPAN>[131]</span>
the lodge and the second stalker’s house, and
after a successful stalk, he fired but wounded the
stag, just grazing him in the lower part of the
body. The stag did not give the rifle another
chance, but turned his head fair south, towards the
top of the C——. We watched him crossing the
top, then we made for where we saw him crossing,
and we saw him about 300 yards away as he was
going down the opposite side, and he was still
going south, then getting out of view, into a hollow.
The stalker did not lose his chance, but made a
sprint to get up to him, which he managed to do,
but the wily fellow was always keeping his back
to his enemy, and making fast for some private
corner, where he hoped he would be safe. The
trigger was not pulled for him. Being in plain
ground there, and the Royal stag fast on the move,
we could do nothing but wait and watch where
he would cross the next ridge, which was fully
a mile away. Once the stalker saw him cross,
we made at once for the spot he went out of our
view, getting there as soon as our legs could
carry us, and after spying that part of the ground
very carefully, we failed to pick him up. That
was in the centre of the Glashan, a piece of
ground about 1½ miles square, very level, with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132"></SPAN>[132]</span>
shallow peat bags, and guarded on three sides
with slightly rising ridges. The distance between
where the stag was wounded and where we lost
him was about seven miles. By this time
the light was failing, so we had to make tracks
for home. One evening, a few days later, when
it was beginning to get dark, the head stalker
was out about the larder, and noticing a stag with
some hinds above the lodge, and putting his
glass on him, at once knew the stag he had the
run after a few days before. I was just after
getting home from the hill, and he ordered me
to go and shoot him. The rifle I never fired
before, and the sight although marked for 100
yards I afterwards found to be a 70 yards
sight. I got to about 100 yards from the stag,
but having the evening light, and being among
juniper bushes, I had to shoot off my hand,
and missed him. There was no other chance
that evening, as the light was getting bad. Two
or three days after, about 10 o’clock in the morning,
I was going along to the E—— Bothy, about
a mile from the lodge, when I saw about twenty
hinds and a stag amongst them, and after putting
the glass on him, I knew it was the same stag. I
at once went back to tell the head stalker, but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133"></SPAN>[133]</span>
finding him not at home, I took the rifle. I got
to about 120 yards of the stag, but shooting
too low, I grazed his foreleg below the heart;
he did not give me another chance then, but
left the hinds and turned to the south across
the top. When I got to the top I noticed him
about half a mile from me; keeping him in view
he went for about two miles south, then turning
south-west I kept him in view for three miles,
then lost sight of him, but I could understand by
the movements of some hinds the line he was
taking. I made for the place where I lost sight of
him, but having got there I could see nothing. I
followed up the burn that rises at Cairn-an-S——,
and after getting half-way up the burn, I came out
to the open to spy. I was spying for some time,
and was putting my glass in its case when I
noticed a black object about half a mile away,
about the size of a blackcock. I used my glass,
and who was this but the Royal lying in the
centre of the Glashan, on quite level ground.
He was lying down licking the scratch where I
wounded him earlier in the day. With great
difficulty and after a long crawl I got to about
70 yards of him, and shot him through the
neck. That was a lucky range, as the rifle was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134"></SPAN>[134]</span>
sighted for 70 yards. I was in an awful mess
through crawling in burns and gutters after him,
but I was very keen on getting him, and as
an old chap once said to me, ‘When you have a
difficult thing to do you must not be minding
your clothes.’ Well, I was pleased I got him as
I was sure he could not live very long. I considered
what to do; my first idea was to put him
in some safe place, and come for him next day, so
I took him to a burnside into a hollow and hid
him, but before doing so I put a small chack with
my knife above his brow antler, to know him if
ever I saw him again, as I did not know who
might be looking at me. I was in doubt whether
I would take his head off or leave it there all
night. I at once changed my mind, as it was so
good a head I did not like leaving him out there
all night. I cut his head off, giving him a
long neck for being stuffed. That finished, I
shouldered the Royal head, took him back five
miles to the E—— Bothy, left him there that
night, and took it two miles further to the lodge
the next day, and to-day it hangs in the chief’s
mansion. The young chief was very glad to get
it. The head was a very good Royal, thick
horns, points equal and well-shaped. The distance<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135"></SPAN>[135]</span>
between the place where I shot him through the
neck and the place we lost him the day the young
chief wounded him is hardly half a mile apart.
That day the stag was first wounded, he went
whatever a distance of six or seven miles to that
quiet spot in the centre of the Glashan. The
day I shot him through the neck I followed him
for about eight miles from the place where I
grazed his foreleg below the heart. He never
saw me, he never stopped, always making for
that private spot, the place in the centre of the
Glashan. So this stag went two times to that
same place, as he hoped he would be safe there,
and possibly that stag might have been lying in
the same bed both nights.” This shows the
distance a stag will go for safety, and that he goes
back to his old home, the spot where he thinks
he is safe. And so I believe that my friend the
stalker must have been right in thinking that the
stag he had found in April was the stag I had shot
in the early days of the preceding October.</p>
<p><SPAN name="SPYING" id="SPYING"></SPAN></p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i134fp" style="max-width: 62.5em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100 p1" src="images/i_134_fp.jpg" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="pfs80">“I WAS SPYING FOR SOME TIME.”</p>
<p class="pfs80">From a Photograph by the Author.</p>
</div>
</div>
<hr class="chap" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />