While walking on the Quantock Hills and Exmoor I have seen many live red deer and the occasional roe deer. However this blogpost is dedicated to artistic representations. These are the ones I have come across so far:
Fawn by artist Fawn, Weston-Super-Mare
Stag Statue at West Quantoxhead
Willow Stag, Nynehead Court
Stag on bench end in Bishops Lydeard Church
Stag statue next to the "Welcome to Minehead" sign at the Ellicombe Roundabout
This stag lives in the garden of some retirement flats in Dulverton
Horatio
This stag, who is called Horatio, can be found in the grounds of Minehead Middle School in Ponsford Road. He was carved with a chainsaw in the summer of 2016 by Matthew Crabb, who is a former pupil of the school and is now a renowned chainsaw artist. The sculpture is 10 feet tall and was commissioned to celebrate the launch of the West Somerset Academies Trust.
Gate at Dunster Village Gardens
Showering's trademark Babycham statue outside Showerings Cider Mill (now the Brothers Drinks' Factory) in Kilver Street, Shepton Mallet
Babycham is a light sparkling perry launched in the UK by Francis Showering in 1953 and first produced at Showerings Cider Mill in Shepton Mallet. It was a particularly popular drink in the 1960s and 1970s and a chamois goat/antelope logo was used to market it. The Babycham brand is now owned by an Australian company: Accolade Wines.
This stag is part of the Wildwood mural in an alleyway just off Glastonbury High Street
Stag on the back of a seat at Kingston St Mary
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