Hackleback
WKR
This has been a common practice for decades. Get rid of the hardwoods to "release" the conifers.
Herbicides has been used for decades. Just because people are starting to realize it now doesn't mean it's bad. Correlation is not causation. I hunt every year for blacktails in some of the most heavily managed tree farms, and not a year goes by that a deer tag doesn't get filled. I find it quite amusing that whenever people aren't seeing animals they have to find someone or something to blame other than their skills as a hunter. I hear it every year, " I didn't see a deer all season" " numbers aren't what they use to be" " damn all the predators". In forestry less round up is applied to a drive way by a homeowner than on one acre of timberland. Also it has no downstream effects. It is applied during dry weather and binds to the soil. It attacks a protein that is responsible for the photosynthesis process. A protein animals don't carry. Please stop spreading the this misinformation because you just now became aware.
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Do they do this in OR? How is the deer population doing in comparison?
I doubt this is a significant factor in the CA deer decline as populations in areas without timber harvest are likewise any down over the past ~25 years, but it is interesting to note.
Foresters don't give a sh&% about deer populations. Just making timber.
Yes I don't know of a timber company on the west coast that doesn't use them at some point in time when trying to establish a stand. Deer populations in my area of southern Oregon are stable. Odfw actually thinks the largest threat to blacktail deer populations in Oregon are bobcats. Which is something I didn't think of.
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There is no spraying within 50 miles of me....and the blacktail population has dwindled dramatically over the last 30 years.....
Before you start ringing your hands over the loggers.....I can tell you its ALWAYS a multi faceted answer. Very rarely its one thing.
Interesting corollary....as the mtn lion population has gone up [since the hunting ban on lions] the deer population has declined. It is a fact that deer are a mtn lions #1 food source afterall. Seems to indicate a relationship, eh?
Predators have overall exploded in CA....don't you think THAT would have a significant impact?
In my east bay area....you see very few deer out in the hills [ like zero-hills that i hike multiple times a week] but then when you get back into the areas around homes and such....bingo- the deer. So why do you think that is? Well of course the deer are seeking refuge and protection from predators......
Before you start blaming loggers which actually create habitat for deer by logging.........you might want to look at these liberal anti hunting groups and politicians....just a thought.
Herbicides has been used for decades. Just because people are starting to realize it now doesn't mean it's bad. Correlation is not causation. I hunt every year for blacktails in some of the most heavily managed tree farms, and not a year goes by that a deer tag doesn't get filled. I find it quite amusing that whenever people aren't seeing animals they have to find someone or something to blame other than their skills as a hunter. I hear it every year, " I didn't see a deer all season" " numbers aren't what they use to be" " damn all the predators". In forestry less round up is applied to a drive way by a homeowner than on one acre of timberland. Also it has no downstream effects. It is applied during dry weather and binds to the soil. It attacks a protein that is responsible for the photosynthesis process. A protein animals don't carry. Please stop spreading the this misinformation because you just now became aware.
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yah except he is talking about very different deer herds. The deer in the east bay are largely non migratory herds that rely on large tracts of land to live out most of their life. Those tracts of land are decreasing in size and are largely being hit by a butt load of different factors from predators, to increased human use, more roads, more vehicle interactions etc. The highly migratory deer herds in the north state are being effected by many of the same factors but they are also losing winter range and seasonal food sources, which is where the spraying of herbicides comes in. Again, logging is a great tool for big game management. The current practices of killing off the vegetation goes against that idea though. It is greed pure and simple and frankly as long as the private land holding use this practice their argument that they are managing land in an ecologically sound manner is lost.(Insert the sound of a mic dropping)
Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, i know. I should've read the posts before posting mine.
This has to be the most out of touch post in this thread. No one is saying the herbicides effect the deer directly as a poison. The herbicides applied, in mass, by a small army of migrant workers wearing tyvek, resprirators and back back pumps, kills off the young growth in a forest. It effects the foots source. so nice attempt to argue a point by pointing out information completely unrelated to the argument. as for you your comment that more glyphosate is applied to the average drive way is just ludicrous. you should see them when they are applying this stuff. A huge tank will be stationed near the unit. The small army of men described above loads up their backpack pumps and proceeds to kill everything in their path. That is how it is done on nearly every single cut on SPI land. That is not even up for debate. they will tell you as much. accept for a few areas they have to avoid they pretty much hit every square inch of any shrub that is starting to grow.
Also if you want to read more about forestry and ungulates please follow the link below:
https://oregonforests.org/sites/default/files/2017-05/OFRI managed forests elk deer_for_web.pdf
Here is some information about herbicide use:
https://oregonforests.org/sites/default/files/2018-06/OFRI_Herbicides-sheet_PRINT.pdf
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all this is awesome. It is too bad Sierra Pacific Industries does not follow the same strict guidelines and protocols here in California. Oregon has done a far better job at regulating the private forest management. Which is why so many of us go to Oregon to hunt now, they have far better deer herds. California (the subject of this thread) has not, which is largely why there is only a small percentage of the migratory deer population as there once was. As far as i am concerned SPI (the largest land owner in all California) is the devil. It is crazy that the one state that over regulates everything has largely left this unregulated. I have a cabin in the mountains here surrounded by SPI land. The cuts we see are nuked almost immediately after cutting and they grow nothing for a long time, You NEVER see the sprouting deciduous shrubs, ever. Usually a few years after the cut the rows of single species evergreen forests take over and soon you have a single species homogeneous row crop forest. I would love it if they applied the sound principals of forest management described in these websites. the fact is they don't.
yah except he is talking about very different deer herds. The deer in the east bay are largely non migratory herds that rely on large tracts of land to live out most of their life. Those tracts of land are decreasing in size and are largely being hit by a butt load of different factors from predators, to increased human use, more roads, more vehicle interactions etc. The highly migratory deer herds in the north state are being effected by many of the same factors but they are also losing winter range and seasonal food sources, which is where the spraying of herbicides comes in. Again, logging is a great tool for big game management. The current practices of killing off the vegetation goes against that idea though. It is greed pure and simple and frankly as long as the private land holding use this practice their argument that they are managing land in an ecologically sound manner is lost.