Jim Heffernan Plastic deer threatened in city hunt
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Homeowners who decorate their yards with life-sized plastic deer are
complaining the sculptures are being damaged by those stalking real
deer during Duluth's special season for bowhunters.
"My decorative doe, Felicity, had an arrow sticking out of her hind quarter," Orval
Pussywillow of Hunter's Park complained yesterday. "This has got to
stop. We paid good money for our beautiful deer." Pussywillow said his
four plastic pink flamingos and a lawn ornament depicting the posterior
of a fat woman bending over were unmolested.
Local police said they have received numerous complaints from
throughout the city that plastic deer are being shot with arrows by
hunters mistaking them for the real thing. One citizen, who declined to
be identified "because I work with a bowhunter," said she has outfitted
her plastic deer with blaze orange vests to protect them from arrows.
Randy Waxwing, spokesman for the Lake Superior Spear, Boomerang & Bow-
hunters Ltd., said residents with plastic deer in their yards should
remove them from now through season's end on Dec. 31 to protect them
during the municipal bow-hunting season. "You can't blame our people
for shooting plastic deer; they're so life-like. Many of our own
members have plastic deer themselves as inspiration for hunting season.
Hunters love deer; that's why we kill them."
Waxwing did point out that association members are complaining to
him that their hunting arrows are being blunted by hitting plastic deer
and not the soft flesh of real deer. "It's a two-way street," he said.
"Good hunting arrows cost plenty."
Thelma Twelvetrees of Thelma's Yard, Garden and Southern Belle
Figurine Emporium, which sells ornamental deer, said sales are down
since the city bowhunting season was announced. "People don't want to
fork over good money for plastic deer only to have them shot full of
arrows," she said. It was not known how the decline in faux deer sales
would affect city sales tax receipts.
Meanwhile, Msgr. Ernest X. Chasuble said religious leaders are
concerned that fake donkeys in Christmas nativity scenes will be shot
at by hunters when churches erect creches on their lawns around
Thanksgiving. "Also wise men riding camels. What if they hit a wise
man? Or the Holy Mother, for that matter?" Chasuble asked.
Concern about safety around Christmas creches outside local churches
was seconded by Worship Duluth, successor organization to the Duluth
Church and Sunday School Bureau, in a news release. "The Christmas
message of 'Peace on Earth' is diluted when you find arrows sticking in
outdoor religious displays," the news release stated. Religious leaders
said either the hunt should be suspended during the holidays or
characters in the displays should be adorned with blaze orange garments.
Officials also predict that ornamental reindeer in secular home displays will be affected.
Finally, Professor Michael Angelo, head of the Sculpture and Human
Sexuality Department at the Arrowhead College of Carnal Knowledge, said
plastic ornamental deer are an important part of American art on a par
with department store mannequins. "I once saw a fake deer with a nude
female mannequin astride it. Priceless," said Angelo, 43, who is
registered with the police.
Film at 10.
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