Oh deer! Wild Muntjac rescued after getting stuck on M&S escalator: Here's what happened

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Imagine stepping inside a store for some quick shopping and being surprised by a deer at Marks & Spencer: a wild muntjac trapped on an escalator, staring blankly at the chaos of modern shopping.

It’s hard to picture, we know — but it happened anyway!


It happened in England. The little deer wandered into the shopping centre, seemed lost, and ended up stuck on the moving steps. Emergency responders and animal rescue teams showed up, along with a crowd of baffled customers. Despite all the commotion (and what must’ve been the worst retail adventure of the deer’s life), rescuers managed to free the animal safely.
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Social media, of course, had a field day with it. People joked that the deer was just looking for Percy Pigs, or maybe eyeing the meal deals. And underneath all that laughter, though, there’s a real concerning trend: wildlife keeps pushing into human spaces as cities expand and green habitats shrink.



What exactly happened?As reported by Sky News, according to witnesses, it happened during store hours, and the deer just wandered in, stepped onto the escalator (a move even humans regret sometimes), and got stuck. Panic broke out as people realized a live deer was inside.

Store workers stopped the escalator and called rescue teams. Photos online showed responders carefully covering the animal with blankets and working to calm it, using specialized equipment to prevent injury. Some said the deer was utterly exhausted and bewildered by the noise.

Eventually, the rescue teams succeeded: the deer was carried out and checked by vets, who later said only minor injuries.



What’s a muntjac?Now, a lot of folks outside the UK were probably wondering, what’s a muntjac? For the unversed, muntjacs are small Asian deer, originally from China and Southeast Asia. Brought to Britain in the 20th century, they escaped from estates and now roam most of England and parts of Wales. Think mid-sized dog, short legs, rounded backs, and unique facial markings. When frightened, muntjacs bark, literally, loudly like a dog.

Muntjacs adapt quite well to woodlands, parks, gardens, and suburbia. So they've started showing up near roads, housing, and even shops. Encounters between humans and muntjacs are getting more common.

But escalator incidents? Nope, those are rare.



The puns and the real concernAnimal welfare groups explain how urban spaces can be dangerous for deer. With noisy roads, glass, and crowds, they get confused and can hurt themselves trying to escape. That’s why rescue teams focus on calming the animal and keeping the public from crowding.

This time, the teams did great.

And of course, online, the story triggered a wave of puns. “Deerly unfortunate,” “stuck between floors and fauna,” “wanted to see what M&S food’s about,” “some light retail therapy”—people couldn’t resist.

However, beyond all these laughs, experts say incidents like this highlight a bigger issue. As cities grow and green spaces shrink, animals are changing their routines. Foxes roam London, wild boars pop up in suburbs across Europe, coyotes show up in North American cities, and monkeys raid Asian markets. And now, apparently, deer try escalators.

Ecologists think we’ll keep seeing wildlife adapt. Some are calling for better urban planning and protected green pathways, so animals don’t end up stuck in malls.


For the shoppers at M&S, though, that day will stick in their memories for reasons that have nothing to do with biology. After all, most people walk into a supermarket expecting long queues or overpriced sandwiches, not a deer caught on an escalator!