08-06-2009, 08:15 AM
sweet.
RASBURG, Vt. - For the last year, David Lawrence has cared for a young moose named Pete that he nursed back to health after it was attacked by dogs and separated from its mother.
Now, Pete eats leaves out of Lawrences hands and lets the 73-year-old farmer scratch his neck like a horse or an oversized dog. Sometimes Pete chases after Lawrence in his pickup truck as he leaves the fenced-in elk hunting preserve where the moose lives.
I feel that he and I have a bond that I think is unique and I think hes a bit confused as to just who he is, Lawrence said. Im not sure he thinks hes a moose. I think he thinks Im his father or something, maybe his mother.
But the Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife said Pete and other native deer and moose living in the compound shouldnt be mixing with the farm-raised elk - animal feed could introduce chronic wasting disease, a brain ailment that strikes deerlike animals.
It may be necessary to destroy Pete and the others NO!! They cant be released into the wild, officials said. The states top game warden, Col. David LeCours, said the department would be open to finding a way to save the animals, but the bigger issue is the health of Vermonts wild deer and moose.
Lawrence said he knew it was illegal for him to tame Pete, but he took over the animals care more than a year ago after hearing about the dog attack. Were human beings and were farmers and we cant stand to see an animal die if we can save it, Lawrence said.
RASBURG, Vt. - For the last year, David Lawrence has cared for a young moose named Pete that he nursed back to health after it was attacked by dogs and separated from its mother.
Now, Pete eats leaves out of Lawrences hands and lets the 73-year-old farmer scratch his neck like a horse or an oversized dog. Sometimes Pete chases after Lawrence in his pickup truck as he leaves the fenced-in elk hunting preserve where the moose lives.
I feel that he and I have a bond that I think is unique and I think hes a bit confused as to just who he is, Lawrence said. Im not sure he thinks hes a moose. I think he thinks Im his father or something, maybe his mother.
But the Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife said Pete and other native deer and moose living in the compound shouldnt be mixing with the farm-raised elk - animal feed could introduce chronic wasting disease, a brain ailment that strikes deerlike animals.
It may be necessary to destroy Pete and the others NO!! They cant be released into the wild, officials said. The states top game warden, Col. David LeCours, said the department would be open to finding a way to save the animals, but the bigger issue is the health of Vermonts wild deer and moose.
Lawrence said he knew it was illegal for him to tame Pete, but he took over the animals care more than a year ago after hearing about the dog attack. Were human beings and were farmers and we cant stand to see an animal die if we can save it, Lawrence said.