Personal Story - Deer Strike & Damage

gstalnaker

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On Friday the 7th I & a friend drove north from Madison to visit Jurustic Park (spelling is correct) north of Marshfield WI. I took back roads to return to Madison which took us south through Mauston, LaValle, Reedsburg, and Plain, where I turned left on WI Cty B towards Sauk City at about 5pm. Not very far from Plain a deer came up out of the left-side ditch across the left lane and into the right lane. I had no time whatever to brake or go off-road and avoid it. The deer did not survive. But my passenger & I did. There was no airbag deployed. I stopped the Bronco and took a quick glance at the front expecting to see significant damage, yet saw practically none.

We drove on home to a flurry of phone calls from unknown numbers to my phone. In the parking lot with its lights, I could better see that the driver's door had damage, but still, surprisingly, not much.

Discovered then from texts I had received that the Ford System had called the Sauk County Sheriff and the State Farm dongle had contacted StateFarm!!

I submitted a claim to StateFarm and on the Monday after took it to Ball Body Shop in Middleton WI. On our walk around I discovered why there appeared to be so little damage - the driver's side of the brush guard was bent toward the grill by 1"-2"!! That is where the deer met its fate.

The inspector told me that had the brush guard not been installed the damage would have been much worse & possibly the deer might have come across the hood and hit the windshield (with "and through it" left unsaid). Which also explains why the airbags did not deploy.

Damage estimate was just shy of $12,000.

The Bronco had less than 3,000 miles on it in the two months since I bought it.

Moral of the story? That $3,000 brush guard may have saved our lives. I did not buy the Bronco because it had the brush guard, but I'm certainly glad I did.
Sponsored

 

dwrufus53

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On Friday the 7th I & a friend drove north from Madison to visit Jurustic Park (spelling is correct) north of Marshfield WI. I took back roads to return to Madison which took us south through Mauston, LaValle, Reedsburg, and Plain, where I turned left on WI Cty B towards Sauk City at about 5pm. Not very far from Plain a deer came up out of the left-side ditch across the left lane and into the right lane. I had no time whatever to brake or go off-road and avoid it. The deer did not survive. But my passenger & I did. There was no airbag deployed. I stopped the Bronco and took a quick glance at the front expecting to see significant damage, yet saw practically none.

We drove on home to a flurry of phone calls from unknown numbers to my phone. In the parking lot with its lights, I could better see that the driver's door had damage, but still, surprisingly, not much.

Discovered then from texts I had received that the Ford System had called the Sauk County Sheriff and the State Farm dongle had contacted StateFarm!!

I submitted a claim to StateFarm and on the Monday after took it to Ball Body Shop in Middleton WI. On our walk around I discovered why there appeared to be so little damage - the driver's side of the brush guard was bent toward the grill by 1"-2"!! That is where the deer met its fate.

The inspector told me that had the brush guard not been installed the damage would have been much worse & possibly the deer might have come across the hood and hit the windshield (with "and through it" left unsaid). Which also explains why the airbags did not deploy.

Damage estimate was just shy of $12,000.

The Bronco had less than 3,000 miles on it in the two months since I bought it.

Moral of the story? That $3,000 brush guard may have saved our lives. I did not buy the Bronco because it had the brush guard, but I'm certainly glad I did.
Glad to hear a relatively good outcome. Stuff can be replaced. Lives cannot.

BTW, growing up in Indiana, deer collisions are relatively common this time of year. And if you hit a deer in a situation like you did, you can claim the carcass for food, or can donate it to a food shelter. Not sure it that's still the case there, or in Wisconsin.
 
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Escape2Bronco

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Both Richland and Sauk counties are bad. Of course Dane isn’t much better. I got my last one on K just west of P Many years ago. My stepson just got one a month ago on P just south of 12. Maybe the herd will get thinned even more in the next few weeks!

This little guy was out for an acorn breakfast last week.

Ford Bronco Sport Personal Story - Deer Strike & Damage IMG_4649
 

RSH

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Luckily for you and your passenger the situation worked out with minimal damage and nobody got hurt, it's still not a pleasant experience.

Doing some canyon sport riding on my motorcycle about a month ago I had a couple of deer jump on the highway in front of me, had I been going faster the outcome could have turned out bad. Ironically I just passed one of those deer signs that are on the side of the road.
 


dwrufus53

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Luckily for you and your passenger the situation worked out with minimal damage and nobody got hurt, it's still not a pleasant experience.

Doing some canyon sport riding on my motorcycle about a month ago I had a couple of deer jump on the highway in front of me, had I been going faster the outcome could have turned out bad. Ironically I just passed one of those deer signs that are on the side of the road.
The DOT should move those signs to a more safe location. :crackup:
 

Robins21

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Good thing you & your passenger were ok. The truck could be fixed.
 

Ernest T

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Deer are evil. Glad it wasn’t worse for you.

I hit one going about 75 on a motorcycle in west Texas about dusk. I woke up two days later in the hospital not remembering anything for about a week leading up to the deer strike. Eventually I got back everything up to about noon that day. It’s a blank from that time until I came to in the hospital.

My injuries were surprisingly light given the impact with the deer and road - mangled clavicle, six broken ribs, severe concussion and bruises all over. I was wearing a helmet, motorcycle jacket with armor, Kevlar lined riding pants, gloves and riding boots. Two surgeries and lots of PT and I’m as good as new!
 

Dannyp56

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I hit a big buck with a 65 chevy Bellaire and cave in the front end. This was in Fort Bragg, CA in the mid 70's. I felt his rack rolling all the way under the car. Traded it a couple days later.
 
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gstalnaker

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Wow. My first car was a '67 Chevy BelAir :) But I never hit a deer in it. Which is not surprising as Florida didn't then have the kind of deer population it now has (but that is nothing compared to Wisconsin). That car did however flat out move - 327 V8.
 


Dannyp56

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Wow. My first car was a '67 Chevy BelAir :) But I never hit a deer in it. Which is not surprising as Florida didn't then have the kind of deer population it now has (but that is nothing compared to Wisconsin). That car did however flat out move - 327 V8.
Mine was a 283 with a 2 speed power glide. My Dad and I had just painted it.
 

Escape2Bronco

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Deer are evil. Glad it wasn’t worse for you.

I hit one going about 75 on a motorcycle in west Texas about dusk. I woke up two days later in the hospital not remembering anything for about a week leading up to the deer strike. Eventually I got back everything up to about noon that day. It’s a blank from that time until I came to in the hospital.

My injuries were surprisingly light given the impact with the deer and road - mangled clavicle, six broken ribs, severe concussion and bruises all over. I was wearing a helmet, motorcycle jacket with armor, Kevlar lined riding pants, gloves and riding boots. Two surgeries and lots of PT and I’m as good as new!
I don’t think many people realize how many deer are I Texas. Especially in the hill country. My grandfather had a ranch outside San Antonio and my parents retired in Kerrville in the 80’s. I’ve been going down there for years. After my father passed, I was going down every 6-8 weeks for several years. I saw more deer there than I do in Wisconsin. They are a bit smaller but somewhat smarter. Up here, when a deer see’s a car, it looks up, waits a second, then darts in front of the car. Down there except during the rut, they are always eating at the side of the road. They stop eating, look up, then go back to eating.

You were fortunate to live through that. I don’t drive my bike much at night and never during the rut around here.
 

Ernest T

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I don’t think many people realize how many deer are I Texas. Especially in the hill country. My grandfather had a ranch outside San Antonio and my parents retired in Kerrville in the 80’s. I’ve been going down there for years. After my father passed, I was going down every 6-8 weeks for several years. I saw more deer there than I do in Wisconsin. They are a bit smaller but somewhat smarter. Up here, when a deer see’s a car, it looks up, waits a second, then darts in front of the car. Down there except during the rut, they are always eating at the side of the road. They stop eating, look up, then go back to eating.

You were fortunate to live through that. I don’t drive my bike much at night and never during the rut around here.
I was lucky. I stop riding at least two hours before sunset now. Your description of Texas deer behavior is spot on. They are surprisingly unconcerned by traffic.
 
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gstalnaker

gstalnaker

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Up here, when a deer see’s a car, it looks up, waits a second, then darts in front of the car.

^^^^^^^^^

Mine didn't wait that second, unfortunately.
 

Escape2Bronco

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Up here, when a deer see’s a car, it looks up, waits a second, then darts in front of the car.

^^^^^^^^^

Mine didn't wait that second, unfortunately.
Especially right now, they are running and not even looking where they are going. Just following their nose. As shown below.

 
 







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