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Neighborhood upset after beloved ‘pet’ deer’s killing
By Lori Losee
KP News
Several Lakebay residents are mourning the loss of a
beloved “pet” deer affectionately known to some as
Piglet and to others as Willow. The deer was found shot
with an arrow on Sept. 10.
The young buck first made its
appearance in Lakebay in July and has made an impact on
several families. One of those families is offering a
reward of $1,000 for any information leading to the
conviction of the deer’s killer.

Photo courtesy of
Bud Ulsh |
Lowell Jones became very fond of
Willow, as he came to know the deer with one long antler
and one stunted. He was the one to find Willow on his
property under a cottonwood tree, dead.
“I just wish that I could have got
to him sooner and could save him, but I couldn’t,” he
said. “I feel a real void and I really miss him.”
Capt. Dan Brinson of the Region 6
office of the state Department Fish and Wildlife in
Montesano said that archery season (bow and arrow
hunting) opened on Sept. 1 and there is nothing his
office can do in regards to this incident.
Jones believes Willow was about a
year old and was left to defend himself in the wild. “He
was a special wildlife creature that took to people,” he
said.
Others believe that Willow/Piglet
was raised by someone and then set free once he became
too much to handle. “This is what happens when people
turn wildlife animals into pets,” Brinson said.

Photo courtesy Anne Nesbit |
Jones said Willow was a special
friend who made his day more special each time he
visited and was smart enough to know and respond to his
name when called.
“Willow made his home at my home
and I thought it would be best that he remains home, and
so I buried him under his favorite spot at my house,
under my bedroom window,” he said. “I wanted to give him
a proper burial.”
Several friends and neighbors came
to Willow’s burial, laid flowers and shared their
memories.
Jones admits although he considers
Willow to be a wild animal, he was known as a pet to him
and many of his neighbors. “I got very attached to him,”
he said. “He was such a cute, loveable guy… I’ve never
known a pet for only three months and became so
attached.”
The biggest issue that Jones has
with Willow’s death was that whoever shot him, did so on
private property and didn’t follow up on the shot.
The young buck was given the name
Piglet by Dave and Anne Nesbit’s 4-year-old son, Matt,
for his eating habits.

Photo courtesy
Bud Ulsh |
“He just ate anything and
everything,” Dave Nesbit said. “Piglet loved to eat our
flowers.” Nesbit said Piglet’s death has been the
hardest for their son, who would wake up every day and
ask if Piglet would come to visit.
Mayo Cove resident Cindy
Johnson-Kuntz remembers when she first met the young
buck through her daughter. “I first met Piglet when I
was cleaning my barn one day,” she said. “I could hear
my 4-year-old daughter playing in the distance. She kept
saying, ‘Oh, dear! I love you, dear!’ I wondered what in
creation she was doing and when I looked up in the horse
pasture, I was in shock. There was my little girl,
barefoot and in a bathing suit, playing in a water
trough with a buck.”
Johnson-Kuntz said she started to
scream for her daughter, Hallie, to get away from the
wild animal. Her daughter put her arms around the deer’s
neck, and said, “No, he loves me and he is my deer
friend.”
To the woman’s amazement, the young
buck seemed to enjoy the hug. To make sure her daughter
was safe, Johnson-Kuntz ran up to her. The deer walked
up to the woman and rubbed her with his nose.
“When I tried to walk Hallie down
to the house, the deer just followed us, and stood at
the back door waiting for us to come back out and play,”
Johnson-Kuntz said.

Photo courtesy
Bud Ulsh |
One close encounter with the young
buck occurred at Bud Ulsh’s home on July 31, when he and
his wife rescued him from their pool after he’d fallen
in. Setting up for their annual senior picnic, Ulsh was
inside his home when Willow/Piglet showed up at their
Lakebay home. Ulsh believes the deer thought the pool
covered with a solar blanket was OK to walk on when he
fell into the water.
“He started to thrash around and
got his front feet onto the deck but couldn’t get out,”
he said.
Too heavy to pull him out himself,
Ulsh asked for his wife to come out and help. Ulsh
jumped in the pool and pushed him up while his wife
helped pull him out. “After we got him out of the pool,
we were hoping that he would stick around for our
picnic, but he left,” he said.
On a different occasion, Ulsh
recalls another time when Willow/Piglet came into and
made himself at home. “One day he came in through our
back door and inside the kitchen,” he said. “I had to
push him out.”
Ulsh said the young buck just
walked around the house and before he knew it, the deer
had come inside. “Boy, that was pretty neat,” he said.
“I just wanted to say how
heartbroken our family is over this senseless and evil
act of cruelty,”

Photo courtesy Anne
Nesbit |
Lakebay resident Lori
Harrison-Hagen said, “As a frequent visitor to Herron
Island, I have had numerous encounters with tame and
friendly deer, but have never encountered so gentle and
friendly an animal as our local deer. He would freely
explore our yard and even enter our home.”
Even in the midst of several
remodeling projects involving heavy machinery and power
tools, Willow/Piglet made his presence known to those
around him. “He would go right up to the workers in the
bulldozers, nuzzle his head in the cab and not walk away
until he was satisfied with the attention he received,”
she said.
Harrison-Hagen added that she can’t
imagine the type of person who could commit such an act
of violence against this gentle and defenseless
creature. “What could the sport be in killing an animal
that happily walks up and eats out of your hand,” she
said. “It would be like killing a kitten.
“This killing was clearly an act of
viciousness, as this animal was left to die a slow and
torturous death, with an arrow protruding from his
severed spine. If someone is capable of this type of
viciousness against a defenseless animal, it seems
possible that their cruelty may potentially not be
limited to animals.”
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