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Red
Deer
A native deer to Scotland, and originally a
deer of forests, red deer have adapted to a life on open hills and
moorland.
The red deer which we may see on the
Garvellachs are pure bred, and have no genes from the similar, but
introduced Sika deer, which is sometimes found on the mainland.
Indeed, Sika deer can be seen at the head of Loch Seil.
A popular myth is that the number of points
on a stag's antlers indicates its age in years. This is in fact
untrue. Stags can live for up to twelve years, but this is
exceptional. The antlers are shed each spring, and re-grow during
the summer in preparation for the Autumn rut, during which the stags
compete for control of a group of hinds.
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Roe
Deer
Our smallest native deer, standing just over two feet at the
shoulders, the Roe deer has had a chequered past throughout
Scotland. At one time it was almost extinct in large parts of the
country, and it is only in recent years, as a result of new forest
plantations and perhaps also because of more mild winters that the
deer has repopulated its former haunts. Less able to adapt to open
moorland than the red deer, roe's only tend to thrive where there is
shelter and grazing provided by trees.
Owing to their size and agility they are able
to evade all types of deer fencing. It is these habits which make
them unpopular with foresters, and roe deer are culled to protect
the forester's commercial interests.
Being a woodland deer, and given their habit
of living in small groups, they are the most difficult of deer to
spot on our boat trips. They are absent from the islands, however
the extensive tracts of atlantic hazelwood that bound the mainland
coast along the early part of our journey may provide an opportunity
to catch a glimpse of this shy, yet beautiful creature.
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Fallow
Deer
The origin of fallow deer in Britain is not
fully clear, but the popular belief is that the Normans introduced
them, in the Middle Ages.
Because of their relatively docile nature and
the ease with which they can be contained by fencing, they were
popular with deer parks. Their present distribution in Britain
largely coincides with the location of former deer parks.
There is a small herd of this medium sized
deer on Scarba, a small island which we shall pass during our
Corryvreckan trip, and with luck we will see these deer grazing the
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Sealife Adventures Dunaverty, Easdale By Oban, Argyll PA34 4RF Scotland. United Kingdom
Tel: 01631 571010 (Daytime), 01852 300203 (Evenings and Weekends)
Email: info@sealife-adventures.com
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