By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂
As we gather around the campfire and fireplace during this holiday season, J.R. Dunsmore has a cautionary tale to share about white-tailed deer as pets.
鈥淛ust don鈥檛 do it,鈥 said the 69-year-old Dunsmore, who lives just outside Guntersville. 鈥淭hey are dangerous. I didn鈥檛 know how dangerous. Now, when I wake up I see half the world, because this (right) half is gone. It can鈥檛 be fixed.鈥
Wearing a patch over his right eye, Dunsmore relived the moment when the buck (named Zeke) that he considered a pet reverted to the normal behavior of a wild animal and almost killed the Marshall County resident.
鈥淚 had a limb off a tree that had acorns on it,鈥 said Dunsmore, who had illegal captive deer in a 1 1/2-acre pen behind his house. 鈥淚 would pick acorns up off the ground and dump buckets full of them into the pen. I looked around and didn鈥檛 see the buck. I opened the gate, stepped through and threw the limb into the pen. When I threw the limb, undoubtedly he was standing against the fence behind me because he just picked me up by the legs and carried me down to a tree and or stump. I really can鈥檛 tell you which one he put me against.