“Some deer came to the squirrel feeder today,” Kari announced at supper one evening. Kari and I both love deer. Kari loves deer because she thinks that they are pretty. I love deer because I think that they are tasty. As a result, our priorities don’t always coincide. But we do both agree that we like having deer around on the property. It isn’t that I have ever actually shot deer on our property. I just want them nearby in case I get hungry.
The squirrel feeder had not always been a squirrel feeder. It was originally a platform that I had built to hold a salt block for the deer. But when the deer consistently ignored the salt, the platform eventually became a place where we set out stale bread and other treats for the squirrels that flourished in the woods near our home. Harsh weather conditions in January and February had made it difficult for the deer to find sufficient food. Now they were getting desperate enough to compete with the squirrels for scraps of stale bread.
“One of the deer was crippled,” Kari continued. “She couldn’t walk on one of her front legs. And she was pregnant too!”
I suddenly knew that our family had acquired a new dependent.
Kari bought a 40-pound bag of shelled corn for the deer. Between the deer, squirrels, turkeys, and other wild inhabitants of the wetlands surrounding our home, the corn did not last long. Kari began making plans for purchasing more.
At that moment, I had an inspiration. I said, “I purchased some shelled corn back in 2016. It has been stored in a steel drum in the pole barn ever since. It is due to be rotated. Let’s use that corn instead.”Continue reading“DIY Wood-Lined-Steel-Drum Corn Storage, by Thomas Christianson”



