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  2. How To Keep Deer Out Of Your Garden For Good - AOL

    www.aol.com/keep-deer-garden-good-142159477.html

    Deer will eat whatever’s seasonally abundant and available, so their diets change throughout the year to include things such as fruit, vegetables, mushrooms, grass, acorns, and crops.

  3. Deer hunting in a bumper crop year: How to capitalize on ...

    www.aol.com/deer-hunting-bumper-crop-capitalize...

    The forest floor is now littered with apples and acorns. Outdoors Columnist Oak Duke shares what that means for deer hunting this fall. Deer hunting in a bumper crop year: How to capitalize on ...

  4. Acorn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acorn

    Many animals eat unripe acorns on the tree or ripe acorns from the ground, with no reproductive benefit to the oak, but some animals, such as squirrels and jays serve as seed dispersal agents. Jays and squirrels that scatter-hoard acorns in caches for future use effectively plant acorns in a variety of locations in which it is possible for them ...

  5. White-tailed deer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White-tailed_deer

    White-tailed deer eat large amounts of food, commonly eating legumes and foraging on other plants, including shoots, leaves, cacti (in deserts), prairie forbs, [32] and grasses. They also eat acorns, fruit, and corn.

  6. California mule deer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_Mule_Deer

    Mule deer are often opportunistic and will consume a large variety of vegetation mainly consisting of whatever is available and easily digestible including stalks, flowers, fruits, seeds of grasses, forbs, buds, seeds (particularly acorns), stems, leaves, the bark of trees, shrubs, fungi, lichens, algae, mosses, and ferns.

  7. 6 Reasons You Should Never Feed Deer in the Winter ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/6-reasons-never-feed-deer-132600039.html

    Grains like corn are high in carbohydrates, while deer naturally eat high-fiber foods in winter. If deer suddenly switch from eating twigs and bark to grain, such as corn, it can cause “corn ...

  8. Woodhouse's scrub jay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodhouse's_Scrub_Jay

    When these birds go to hide their own acorns, they check first that no other jays are watching. Western scrub jays sometimes land on the backs of mule deer to eat ticks and other parasites present on the deer. The deer seem to appreciate the help, often standing still and holding up their ears to give the jays access. [8]

  9. Follow These Expert Tips to Keep Deer Out of Your Garden

    www.aol.com/expert-tips-keep-deer-garden...

    Browsing height: Deer eat at different levels, but you'll often see signs of munching around 5 feet or lower, especially on smaller trees and bushes. Rubbing or scraping marks: ...