WARNING Bloody Deer Pics

CAN YOU SAY LIVER FOR DINNER???

YA,OFFICER,I WAS ONLY DOING 35 MPH WHEN IT HAPPENED!!!

THE ONLY bobcat NOT SEEING ANY SMILES IN THEM PICTURES!!!
 
holy hell that would suck.




Krusty.jpg
 
Thanks for the warning,lol. I wonder if that thing that looks like a liver in the back by the coke bottles was edible? fatrooster.
 
That is the liver... and if you look close you can see the heart back near the rear hatch.


-DallanC
 
fatrooster

HELL YA IT WAS EDIBLE!!!

YOU CAN'T GET ANY FRESHER THAN THAT!!!

I WONDER IF ANY OF THEM OTHER VITALS HIT ANYBODY UPSIDE THE THINKER???

YOU EVER HAD COKE & FRESH LIVER???

THE ONLY bobcat THINKING THE HEART MADE IT CLEAR TO THE BACK OF THAT VEHICLE,A SMORGAUS BOARD ON WHEELS,DO YOU LIKE IT RARE,I'D SAY THIS WAS RARE!!!
 
I was enjoying a glass of cabernet or was it merlot. DOES NOT MATTER ANYMORE. Blow chunks..Maybe.
 
wonder what the resell value of those vehicles is going to be worth with the New Deer Mod.



-Cass
 
Steaks on the grill! That heart almost made it into the cooler. Excuse me while I go cook up a batch of vennison spaghetti! Yummmy yum yum!
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Eric
 
For hell sakes man, my wife just walked by and she's trying to ban me from the sight now............ I think I'll eat some deer jerky and go to bed. See you all tomorrow.

Dub
 
cars are too arrow dynamic today and thats what we get in the windshield......Crazy!, I'd wanna know what happened to the driver, he must of got a mouth full 'eh......
 
What amazed me is the amount of blood all over the drivers seat. I can't imagine what the person driving looked like when they got out. If they were going very fast it could be some of their blood mixed in there too.
 
No doubt AZ....I can't imagine the driver makin' it out of there alive! That's messed up!
 
Although this looks impressive, I am calling BS. Dried blood is not that bright. The driver's seat is covered with blood, most of which would have been deflected had a driver been there. That much damage but yet liver and heart look like they have been cut out, NOT. It did not look right when I first saw it so I showed it to a guy at work that has doctored photos and he immediately said it was fake. Does look impressive though.
 
Animal-caused fatal crashes hits record

Dee-Ann Durbin THE ASSOCIATED PRESS


WASHINGTON -- Cars and motorcycles crash into deer more than 4,000 times a day, and it's taking an increasingly deadly toll -- on people.

Last year a record 210 motorists were killed in collisions with animals, mostly deer. That was 40 more than the previous year and more than twice the number in 1993, according to a study by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety

Accidents
are most likely to happen in November, the institute said, because hunters are out and deer are in the middle of their mating season, both of which cause the animals to be on the move. Crashes are most likely to occur during evening or nighttime, often on rural roads with speed limits of 55 mph or higher.

"The deer population is growing and there are more vehicles on the road every year," Allan Williams, the institute's chief scientist, said Wednesday. "There's just a lot more chance for interaction with animals on the roads."

Deer are involved in about 75 percent of fatal animal-crash accidents. In all, there were 1.5 million deer crashes last year, injuring 13,713 people and causing $1.1 billion in vehicle damage, the institute said.

The study found most animal crashes involved one vehicle and deaths usually were caused when the vehicle left the road or a motorcyclist fell off the bike. In relatively few cases, people were killed when the animal crashed through the windshield.

Other animals that cause crashes include horses, moose, dogs, bears, cats and opossums, though none is responsible for a significant number. Cattle also cause a small percentage of crashes, particularly in Western states.

Such animal-involved fatal crashes have been rising since the mid-1990s, according to federal data analyzed by the institute. Between 1993 and 1997, an average of 119 fatal crashes occurred each year. Between 1998 and 2002, the figure rose to 155.

The institute said special signs during migratory periods, thinning herds and signs that activate when deer are near roadways have shown promise in reducing crashes. Drivers also should be alert and slow down in the evenings, Williams said.

But even with precautions some crashes are unavoidable.

"Sometimes animals just appear in the roadway and there's not much chance to react," Williams said.

Motorcyclists are particularly vulnerable, especially when the rider fails to wear a helmet. In the institute's analysis of fatal crashes in nine states, 65 percent of the 60 motorcyclists and all-terrain vehicle riders killed weren't wearing helmets.

"If an animal hits a motorcycle, the motorcyclist can go off the bike pretty easily," Williams said.

Of the nine states studied, only Georgia, Missouri and North Carolina require helmets for all riders. Minnesota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and Wisconsin require helmets for teenagers, but not adults, and Colorado doesn't require helmets.

The same study found 60 percent of the 93 vehicle occupants killed in animal crashes weren't wearing seat belts.

Thought you guys might find this article interesting. Any thoughts out there as to the effectiveness of those vehicle mounted devices that deter deer from running out onto the road?
 
If none of that blood got on the driver, that dude has got some seriously quick reaction time to avoid any of that mess. Man that's nasty. How would you clean that crap up?

Josh
 

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