WV Mountaineer
WKR
If he's not seeing any deer and thinks that the population is in bad shape, why did he shoot one?
He shot a buck. That affects the herd by a net of one. Nobody is preaching deer horns here. Only deer numbers
If he's not seeing any deer and thinks that the population is in bad shape, why did he shoot one?
He shot a buck. That affects the herd by a net of one. Nobody is preaching deer horns here. Only deer numbers
In response to wapiti66 the issue isn’t a loss of “forest acres” the problem is that much of the forest is also barren. Clearcuts used to be a smorgasbord for deer in a sort of food dessert. The loss is really the clearcut, what used to be a productive habitat break and sort of food plot spread throughout much less productive timber is now barren. Not of trees, but of the Forbes and things that used to grow in them traditionally.
I'm not preaching deer antlers, either. I'm talking deer numbers, as well.
I understand its not a loss of forest acres that's the issue. I was asking if there was a food source underneath all the timber before its cut, which I assumed was no. You confirmed it is mostly barren. So my point is that they aren't losing any EXISTING food source because it simply wasn't there to begin with. The loss is the timber. It sounds like maybe they used to GAIN a food source after the clearcut was done, but now that is suppressed for a few years to allow trees to get established again. In short, they aren't losing anything that existed for them to eat before, they just aren't gaining a new source of food behind the timber right away. I wanted to clarify if they were actually losing an existing food source, which it sounds like no. Thanks.In response to wapiti66 the issue isn’t a loss of “forest acres” the problem is that much of the forest is also barren. Clearcuts used to be a smorgasbord for deer in a sort of food dessert. The loss is really the clearcut, what used to be a productive habitat break and sort of food plot spread throughout much less productive timber is now barren. Not of trees, but of the Forbes and things that used to grow in them traditionally.
Good grief sometimes this place drives me nuts!
Seems like a few people posting here may actually be foresters posting facts and yet everyone else keeps harping on about their emotional issues with herbicides and clear cuts. Do you want facts from people knowledgeable about forestry or do you want to be upset with the evil timber companies?
You noticed a lack of browse in a clear cut on a TOUR?
Did you take plots? How much of the cut did you look at? What are they regenerating? Was it planting or natural regeneration? Conversion? Do you know what's palatable browse for the area? What's the overall management plan for the area?
Awful lot of talk about glyphosate, is that what was sprayed?
I understand how it could be concerning and we should all be interested in how natural lands are being managed, especially public lands, but I think you're WAY off base.
I've been on 100's of clear cuts, both with herbicide use and without, and there isn't any shortage of deer habitat created in the process. The opposite is much much worse!
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Not only are the deer disappearing...but some people too. /grin
Sorry, in advance.......A bit of a parody on the OPs thread title- (all in jest)
Oregon hunter kills advancing mtn lion- link
Hunter kills advancing cougar near Mount Hood | OregonLive.com
Hat tip to my Oregon buddy Javan for sending this over. i didn't realize there have been 2 people killed this year already by lions in Oregon??????
A search shows multiple articles on lions/attacks in Oregon.