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These two bucks locked antlers in Port Mansfield, prompting
a rescue effort Monday morning. Six men managed to subdue
the deer and separate them after about an hour with some
help from a hacksaw.

One of the freed bucks leaves the scene by crossing part of
the marina. The buck eventually disappeared, tired but
apparently OK. The Monday ordeal took nearly an hour and
involved six rescuers.
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January 4, 2008 - 12:14AM
Horns of a dilemma have
residents saying ...
By STEVE SINCLAIR/VALLEY
MORNING STAR
PORT MANSFIELD — Chuck Theiss
received on Monday morning one of the strangest requests
he’s ever had. “A friend called and said there were two
deer locked up and asked what I could do about it,” said
Theiss, who owns a marine repair business in Port Mansfield.
By this time, the bucks had moved to the middle of town off
Laguna Drive, one of the small fishing village’s main
thoroughfares.
Theiss contacted game wardens who informed him there wasn’t
much they could do about it, but he did receive permission
to try something
on his own.
Theiss and five other men — Ken Nolte, Fred Longoria, Oscar
Ramirez, Chris Anderson and Howard Steussey — were
determined to free the exhausted deer.
“When I got there to look at the situation, the deer were so
tired their tongues were hanging out,” Patsy Nolte, Ken’s
wife, said.
“They could barely stand up,” said Ken Nolte.
Theiss said each of the bucks weighed about 100 pounds. One
was an eight- pointer and the other had 10 points. He said
the deer probably got into a fight during the rut, when
bucks battle among themselves for breeding rights.
There was a sense of urgency in the rescue because the deer
had ventured precariously close to the marina. If they
slipped into the water, a rescue would have been much more
difficult and drowning was a possibility.
To unlock the antlers, the men first had to subdue the deer.
They grabbed their hind legs, forced them to the ground and
four of the men held down the deer while the other two tried
to free them, Patsy Nolte said.
“Howard was working the antlers and just about got them
unstuck, except for one tine,” she said.
Anderson used a hacksaw to saw off the tip of the
troublesome tine and free the bucks.
By this time, news had spread throughout Port Mansfield and
dozens of people showed up to cheer on the rescuers and
watch the drama unfold.
After the antlers were unlocked, there was another little
problem to overcome: beating a hasty retreat to avoid being
gored.
“Someone said, ‘One, two, three,’ and we got up and ran,”
Ken Nolte said. “But, the deer were too tired to come after
us.
“Everyone was clapping and high-fiving it,” Ken Nolte said.
In the meantime, one of the bucks stumbled into the water,
swam around a little, walked around a cove and disappeared,
Theiss said. The other got up, ran toward the water, then
headed west to freedom.
Both deer appeared to be OK, just exhausted.
The drama took about an hour, but was worth it, Theiss said.
“Yeah, I’d do it again,” he said. “I really want to give the
animals a fighting chance.”
For Ken Nolte, freeing the bucks left him with a good
feeling.
“We were all very happy,” he said. “One lady yelled out ‘You
guys are our heroes.’”
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