Sponsored

Near Miss With a Deer

DeafPug

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 20, 2021
Threads
6
Messages
567
Reaction score
843
Location
Kansas
Vehicles
'18 Model 3, '22 R1T
Driving home tonight over 4 hours after sunset, so generally well after the time that deer are most active, I just about became a statistic with my R1T. Traveling 55 mph on a paved county road, I saw a couple deer in the corner of my eye in the ditch, and then not even a second later, saw one barely trotting across the road right in front of me. Luckily, I was able to slow just enough, swerve slightly, and the deer decided to get a move on, that I barely missed it.

This is the closest I've come to hitting one so far - got the blood pumping for a little bit!

Rivian R1T R1S Near Miss With a Deer 1767761318839-sl


Rivian R1T R1S Near Miss With a Deer 1767761365701-3h


Sponsored

 

Rade

Well-Known Member
First Name
Rade
Joined
Sep 19, 2024
Threads
36
Messages
608
Reaction score
778
Location
US - Rhode Island
Website
radmorningcoffee.blogspot.com
Vehicles
2025 Rivian R1T - Large. Delivered on November 23, 2024.
Occupation
Retired
Traveling 55 mph on a paved county road, I saw a couple deer in the corner of my eye in the ditch, and then not even a second later, saw one barely trotting across the road right in front of me.
I think about that a lot. We see deer in the Interstate medians and standing far off to the side of the roads a lot, too. Question (and granted you were probably in serious accident avoidance mode); did the deer appear in the drivers display as anything?
 

Donald Stanfield

Well-Known Member
First Name
Donald
Joined
Jul 31, 2022
Threads
59
Messages
8,312
Reaction score
16,661
Location
USA
Vehicles
2025 R1S Tri Ascend, 2024 i4 M50
Occupation
Stuff and things
Good job avoiding that accident.
 
  • Like
Reactions: TJM
OP
OP
DeafPug

DeafPug

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 20, 2021
Threads
6
Messages
567
Reaction score
843
Location
Kansas
Vehicles
'18 Model 3, '22 R1T
I think about that a lot. We see deer in the Interstate medians and standing far off to the side of the roads a lot, too. Question (and granted you were probably in serious accident avoidance mode); did the deer appear in the drivers display as anything?
i don’t have any idea about something showing on the display. I don’t remember hearing any emergency braking alarms. There could have been,, but it was over in a flash.

Thinking back - I didn’t notice the anti-lock brakes going, so should have hit the brakes harder. I also should have had the high beams on. I don’t particularly care for how the auto dim happens at times, so I don’t always have the brights on when driving on the country roads.
 

Sponsored

Weck

Well-Known Member
Joined
May 9, 2025
Threads
1
Messages
108
Reaction score
76
Location
MKE
Vehicles
2025 R1T
i don’t have any idea about something showing on the display. I don’t remember hearing any emergency braking alarms. There could have been,, but it was over in a flash.

Thinking back - I didn’t notice the anti-lock brakes going, so should have hit the brakes harder. I also should have had the high beams on. I don’t particularly care for how the auto dim happens at times, so I don’t always have the brights on when driving on the country roads.
The adaptive high beams on Gen 2 are AWESOME for rural roads and deer. I was saved by them within a month of getting my truck last March.

Classic situation of oncoming car and a deer crossing behind it, the adaptive blacked out around the car but kept the opposite ditch lit up bright allowing me to see the deer despite the headlight glare coming at me.

Have since had a few more encounters, but not close as I could see them coming.

I leave those things on permanently, have yet to be flashed by other traffic so they seem to work as intended.
 

Birdowin

Well-Known Member
First Name
Matt
Joined
Mar 14, 2022
Threads
16
Messages
277
Reaction score
220
Location
Portland OR
Vehicles
Rivian R1T / Tesla model S
Occupation
Retired from construction.
Whenever I see a deer in the road in front of me I hit the breaks and get on the horn. That gets them moving.
 

Eeyore

Well-Known Member
First Name
Bruce
Joined
Nov 21, 2020
Threads
3
Messages
1,146
Reaction score
1,486
Location
Oregon
Vehicles
R1T LE, ID.4 AWD Pro S, Honda Fit
Occupation
Retired Union Electrician
Clubs
 
That's a brown pants moment for sure.
Happy for the near miss.
 

bfilippo

Well-Known Member
First Name
Benjamin
Joined
Sep 16, 2024
Threads
39
Messages
682
Reaction score
694
Location
Downeast Maine
Vehicles
2022 Launch Edition R1S Limestone, 2026 Gen2 R1T Tri Max AT, Storm Blue
Occupation
Consultant
The adaptive high beams on Gen 2 are AWESOME for rural roads and deer. I was saved by them within a month of getting my truck last March.

Classic situation of oncoming car and a deer crossing behind it, the adaptive blacked out around the car but kept the opposite ditch lit up bright allowing me to see the deer despite the headlight glare coming at me.

Have since had a few more encounters, but not close as I could see them coming.

I leave those things on permanently, have yet to be flashed by other traffic so they seem to work as intended.
Agreed, here we have deer in the road just about year round, so it’s a huge benefit with the headlights plus high res cameras.
 

Dave Cundiff

Well-Known Member
First Name
Dave
Joined
Feb 28, 2024
Threads
4
Messages
1,173
Reaction score
1,586
Location
Pacific County, Washington
Vehicles
'23 R1S (DM,Max); '23 R1T (QM,Lg); '23 Chevy Bolt
Two principles of deer behavior that help my wife and me avoid problems:

First, adult deer are smart -- in the same way that human three-year-olds are smart. They are generally good at respondling to one situation at a time. If we and our cars are the second situation, and not the first, they appear to us to be incredibly stupid and unpredictable.

Second, deer generally stick together for mutual protection (e.g., sounding a collective alarm about predators). When you see one or more deer, there's a high probability there are other group members that you don't see.

***

If a deer is afraid of something in the forest, or afraid of being separated from its group, it may dart in front of us. This reflects normal deer behavior. Those behaviors aren't crazy. They're just very different from what we usually expect wildlife to do.

So, when I see a deer anywhere close to the road, I slow down to a speed where the deer I see, and any other deer, can see my car and adjust its actions accordingly. Because the deer may take a while to react, I try to slow down to maybe 5-6 mph, or maybe stop completely, depending on circumstances. I haven't hit a deer since fall 2016, when I first started this strategy.

If, for some reason, we do hit a deer, I'm still glad we have a Rivian. The Rivian's electronics will likely be badly damaged, and the Rivian may well be totaled. The deer won't do well either. But the humans will likely be uninjured.

***

Adult elk are a lot more savvy than deer about roads and cars, although elk calves are not. But that's another story.

I hope this helps make sense of a scary situation, @DeafPug. Glad you and your family are OK. Best wishes!
Sponsored

 
 








Top