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In addition, the state will regularly take samples from some of the animals to look for signs of disease, Wood said. It all adds up to a pardon for Vermont's most famous animal. "Power to the 'pete-ple'!!!!!" wrote one Facebook friend. "We won one for the big guy!!!!" Nelson, a 68-year-old dairy farmer, says the moose is blissfully unaware of the fate he dodged. The animal certainly looked it Wednesday, as Lawrence hand-fed him through a fence, reflecting on the reprieve. "He just does his thing every day. If someone shot him and shot him good, he wouldn't have cared because he wouldn't have known," Lawrence said. The moose has a new lease on life now -- two of them, in fact. Patty, a female moose that was keeping companions with him last fall, is due any day now with a calf believed to be Pete's. "He better not go near the calf and Patty," Lawrence said. "He better stay clear for a while. The female is very aggressive and will not tolerate anybody, not just him. She's not going to let nobody near that calf."
Given Pete's history, it's best she doesn't. ___ On the Net:
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