Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 20, 1954
Once in a Lifetime
By Charlton Smith, Ranger Naturalist
On June 29, 1954, the day dawned bright
and clear. Early in the morning, Assistant Park Naturalist Richard Brown
and I were driving down the highway toward South Entrance when suddenly,
rounding one of the sharp curves, we came upon a group of parked cars.
We proceeded to a turn-out and then returned to the scene on foot.
"What has happened?" brought an
immediate chorus, "There is a baby in there among the trees." "A what?"
We were then able to find out from one of the people present that there
was a baby deer in the area. The first group of people had seen a
Columbian black-tailed doe and two fawns. When they stopped to take a
closer look, the doe and one of the fawns jumped off into the woods,
while the other fawn remained near the edge of the highway.

Fawn in Huckleberry Patch
From Kodachrome by Richard M. Brown
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We watched from a distance as the
cameras clicked and the movie cameras droned on. After all the people
had left the area, we took a closer look at the fawn. There it lay,
directly in front of us, probably no more than a day or two old. It was
nestled in a clump of huckleberry, its head resting on an old log. On
either side of the clump of huckleberry were young mountain hemlock
trees, about ten or twelve feet high.
Waiting for the sun to highlight the
fawn, hoping it would not move, and trying to appear nonchalant as the
cars passed by truly taxed our patience. Finally the stage was set, and
Richard Brown began to take pictures of the fawn from a distance of
fifty feet. With the camera showing only a few pictures remaining, Dick
proceeded to move closer to the fawn, finally approaching within a few
feet. During this entire time, the fawn appeared as motionless as a
statue. After the roll of film was used up, I decided to see how
motionless it would remain. Moving my arms outward, I gradually
approached the fawn. Still no movement. Slowly I moved my hand outward
as if to pet the animal. Not an eyelash fluttered. The only movement was
the slight heaving of its body as it breathed. We were able to approach
within a foot of the fawn.
Finally we went on our way, allowing
the fawn to return to its mother. On our way back, later that same
morning, we stopped at this place again, but there was no trace of the
fawn.
After recounting the incident to my
family that evening, we decided to return to the spot that night.
Approaching cautiously, we saw a doe about 1,000 yards from the original
point. Would we be able to see the doe with its two fawns again? Slowly
creeping up to the area near the huckleberry mat, we peered breathlessly
through the brush into the place where we had originally seen the fawn.
We gazed upon an ordinary clump of huckleberries; no fawn was to be seen
that night or any succeeding night. Truly we had been lucky in seeing
the "once in a lifetime" view of a very young fawn that morning.