Watching Red Deer
Watching Red Deer. Walker looking through binoculars at one of the dominant stags on the moorlands of the Derbyshire, Peak District National Park. Rather than focusing on the stag itself I chose to focus on the walker in the distance, using enough depth of field to ensure the shape of the stag was still recognisable.
Watching Red Deer – More About Red Deer:
Red deer are the largest of our native mammals having migrated to Britain from Europe over 11,000 years ago.
Due to vast scale deforestation and overhunting the red deer population was once confined to the Scottish Highlands and ‘the Deer Parks’ of England. In recent times the population has recovered considerably and without any natural predators to keep the population down, they have become so abundant they are considered pests in some regions.
The wild population on the Peak District’s Eastern Moors are thought to have originated from the nearby Chatsworth Estate. The feral population exploded from just a few in the 1980s to around 40 by the early 2000’s. The most recent estimates put the population at 400 plus and deer can often be seen in the outskirts of Sheffield.
October ’til early November is the best time of year to watch our British deer as they participate in the rut, with the stags engaging in fierce and often fatal battles to exert their right to mate with the hinds.
You can find more on Red Deer here.