Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Hermaphroditic deer with seven legs ‘tasty’

Wisconsin hunter bags odd beast with pickup in driveway, eats it

IMAGE: Deer legs, Richard Lisko
Patrick Flood / AP
Richard Lisko, who lives near Waucousta, Wis., holds one of the extra legs, located halfway up the leg of a deer he hit with his truck last month, on Wednesday in Waucousta.
Slide show
A young crab-eating macaque is carried by his mother in their enclosure at Basel zoo
  Animal Tracks
Find a supportive mother monkey, a pooch running for first pet and more eye candy for animal lovers.

more photos

Video: Pet health
'Puppy cam' spreads across Internet
Nov. 15: Three male and three female puppies are the latest Internet sensation, with people around the world tuning in to see their antics via a live webcasting channel. NBC’s Amy Robach speaks with Ustream.com founders John Ham and Brad Hunstable.

updated 5:04 p.m. ET Dec. 14, 2006

FOND DU LAC, Wis. - Rick Lisko hunts deer with a bow but got his most unusual one driving his truck down his mile-long driveway. The young buck had nub antlers — and seven legs. Lisko said it also had both male and female reproductive organs. "It was definitely a freak of nature," Lisko said. "I guess it's a real rarity.”

He said he slowed down as the buck and two does ran across the driveway Nov. 22, but the buck ran under the truck and got hit.

When he looked at the animal, he noticed three- to four-inch appendages growing from the rear legs. Later, he found a smaller appendage growing from one of the front legs.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

"It's a pretty weird deer," he said, describing the extra legs as resembling "crab pinchers."

"It kind of gives you the creeps when you look at it," he said, but he thought he saw the appendages moving, as if they were functional, before the deer was hit.

Warden Doug Bilgo of the state Department of Natural Resources came to Lisko's property near Mud Lake in the town of Osceola to tag the deer.

  Click for message board

"I have never seen anything like that in all the years that I've been working as a game warden and being a hunter myself," Bilgo said. "It wasn't anything grotesque or ugly or anything. It was just unusual that it would have those little appendages growing out like that."

Bilgo took photos and sent information on the animal to DNR wildlife managers.

John Hoffman of Eden Meat Market skinned the deer for Lisko, who wasn't going to waste the venison from the animal.

"And by the way, I did eat it," Lisko said. "It was tasty."

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored links

Resource guide