To clarify, the friggen deer ran into ME, I didn't run into the friggen deer. It was during daylight hours in a 45 mph zone. I even had the right of way! I mean, there wasn't even one of those crossing signs for the friggen deer. I saw the friggen thing heading in my direction from the right. The left lane was empty with clear sight lines. I moved in that direction while braking heavily.
I thought the friggen deer would do one of two things. I thought it would either veer off before it got to the road or continue on past me in front. Maybe it was blinded by the yellow paint job, although if it was, you'd think people would be hunting them from yellow ATVs all the time, but the friggen thing did neither of those two things. It ran into my car! I was the innocent bysitter.
Damien, I don't live in a big city. I live in a small town where the roads are perfectly suited for a GT40. A GT40 is meant to be driven and it was specifically made originally to be driven at all hours of the day and night. No friggen deer is going to keep me from driving my car when I want. Hell, it's STILL a free country. On top of that, I'm not going to adorn my car with deer whistlers either. For God's sake, man, I have a MKII with a Gurney bubble. If Dan's car didn't have deer whistlers on it then by God, neither will mine. (Although I'm going to look more closely now at the cars in those old Le Mans pictures, maybe rent the movie again.)
As for the friggen people who feed the friggen deer, they're creating a diseased, unhealthy population that's oftentimes starving in spite of having full bellies. Friggen deer have metabolisms that change in the fall when rich food becomes scarce. Their bodies are designed to require less nourishment in the winter than in the summer. When people feed them, particularly during the winter months, they're getting more sustenance than they can handle or digest. Their bellies are full but they're not being nourished. The friggen deer starve.
And I say, "Let em." Friggen deer are wild animals. They're also pretty damn dumb. I mean, come on. How many generations of friggen deer have come and gone since the advent of the automobile? A lot. And how many have been killed by autos? Again - while not a precise number - a lot.
Yet the friggen deer STILL haven't picked up on the idea that cars and trucks are predators. And they haven't made the connection that paved roads are where the most dangerous predators hang out. In fact, some of the friggen deer are so damn dumb that they'll run into the predator rather than turn away.
Geesh!