Parker County Today July 2015 | Page 91

said. “I wasn’t at home at the time. The driver hit his brakes and the noise scared Bucky and he jumped the fence and ran into the woods. They called me and I came right home. I was scared to death that he was gone for good. He wasn’t nearly old enough to fend for himself.” John went into the woods to look for the fawn.   “I went in and walked around and looked around and called him,” John said. “There was no sign of him. I heard something. I turned around and my dogs were right behind me. Then, I decided to stand still for a long while and there he was. I decided I’d better put a taller fence around his pen. When I’m at home, I bring him in the house with me.” When PCT asked him about his plans for Bucky’s future, he paused for a good, long while. It’s obvious that he’s grown fond of the fawn. “He’s very social,” John said. “If I isolate him from people and the dogs, he gets anxious. But, when he gets old enough to fend for himself, I plan to let him choose for himself. If he wants to stick around the place — that’s great. If he wants to go and be on his own, he can do that too. I’ll let him go when he’s old enough. Right now, he’s still on the bottle. He is pretty-well housebroken, you know …” So if you see a pickup tooling about one day, a few years from now, with an outdoorsy-looking guy behind the wheel and a 10-point buck in the passenger’s seat … well, you’ll know that Bucky decided to just stick around. JULY 2015 PA R K E R C O U N T Y T O D AY 89