Marlborough Express - Weekend Express

Deer stuns mussel farmer

- OLIVER LEWIS

Deer are known for being fleet of foot, but one plucky creature has shown they also take to swimming like a duck to water.

Clearwater Mussels owner John Young spotted what he thought was a log floating through one of his mussel farms, off the west coast of Maud Island, during a routine inspection trip last week. But as the boat moved closer, Young realised it wasn’t a log at all.

‘‘I had another guy with me, Brian Godsiff, and he said, ‘bugger me, it’s a deer, I’ve only ever seen that once in my life before’.’’ Young said the deer was abut 250 metres from the shore, in water 40m deep. It was swimming through the buoys of the mussel farm, pushing itself up and over the lines that lay just under the water.

The pair stopped to watch the scene for a good 10 minutes. Young said it was an amazing sight, and that neither of the two men, both keen hunters, had any intention of harming the animal.

‘‘As I get older it’s very much live and let live. We’re realists, of course. We live in the Sounds and we have to shoot deer and other pests like possums because there’s too many,’’ he said.

‘‘But I certainly didn’t feel like ruining that deer’s day, it was having a beautiful time and so were we.’’ The mussel farmer shared one of the photograph­s of the swimming deer with Aquacultur­e New Zealand, which posted it to its Facebook page.

Although it was the first time he had seen it himself, Young said a fisherman once told him about coming across two deer swimming together about a kilometre offshore.

‘‘They’re such amazing, agile animals. It was just an idyllic thing, watching it swim through the mussel farm. I thought it was just marvellous,’’ he said.

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Clearwater Mussels owner John Young spotted this deer taking a swim through one of his mussel farms, on the western side of Maud Island.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Clearwater Mussels owner John Young spotted this deer taking a swim through one of his mussel farms, on the western side of Maud Island.

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