Staying Warm: Surviving a -25°F Morning at Otter Creek

posted in: Nature & Outdoors, Wildlife, Winter | 0

It takes simple, raw hardiness to survive a -25°F (-32°Celcius) Otter Creek cold snap in January.

As I walked to my car for work the other morning, I spotted these two whitetail deer bedded down under the pine trees at the edge of our yard. They blended so well in the landscape, wearing a fine dust of frost and snow that refused to melt.

Whitetail deer bedded down in the snow under pine trees.

Resilience in the Deep Freeze

You might be wondering how deer can survive a night like this at -25 F (-32 Celsius). Whitetail deer possess the perfect tool for the job. Their winter coats consist of hollow hairs that trap heat against their bodies like a high-end puffy jacket. By bedding down together and remaining still, they conserve every precious calorie.

I felt a mix of awe and “neighborly” concern as I climbed into my warm car. They barely moved; they simply watched me from the trees with a calm, unafraid gaze. They offered a humbling reminder: while we crank up the thermostat inside, the wild world simply beds down and stays warm all winter.

Fun Fact: Deer possess such efficient insulation that their body heat won’t even melt the snow beneath them!