I'm not exactly in mourning, but this picture witnesses to my sadness because I took this picture from the deck of our house, the house we used to live in, just beyond the same Floyd River that came up, a flash flood, and ate our bottom story. The fact is we saw more deer in the early years of our residency out there north of Alton, but I did catch this one against a stand of corn some people in the Third World would think not only extraordinary but impossible. But there she is. She's beautiful.
During the last year of our stay out there, I don't remember ever seeing deer out beyond our back yard. They were gone. Why? The flood maybe, or perhaps that wasting disease that took many of them. My neighbor told me some guy told him that he'd found three or four dead deer, together a couple of times, victims of that disease, some kind of wasting disease.
I'm guessing the drop of in the deer population had at least something of the markings of that gigantic flood we went through--the high-water mark five feet (that's not an error) --FIVE FEET higher than the highest flood recorded previously at Alton, an unbelievable flash flood--all of it, one day. It broke down our downstairs door to a walk out basement and rudely knocked one of the family trying to save stuff when the surf suddenly washed up and in. By six that night, it was gone, out the same door it knocked down, retreated to its banks a day or so later.
Anyway, when some program or another kicked up old photographs of mine, it showed me this one eight years ago, where we lived and who we lived with. Very sweet.
Yes, I miss 'em. Even this guy, a little tiny bit. It's hardly a fair judgement because I caught him at such a good angle. He was probably never as cute as he was the winter day he inched right up to my boot, took a good smell, and crept off, as if I was of no particular interest.