I wouldn't worry about CWD! I live smack dab in the hot zone where CWD started in Colo in the early 1980's. 40 years later we have lots of healthy deer with mature bucks running around. I've only seen 2 sick deer in over 40 years roaming the hills where CWD prions have built in the soil. I work out in the field year-round and there are still monster mature muley bucks in our winter ranges. We've never seen a catastrophic die-off in all of these years.
Although some may be concerned about eating CWD positive deer meat there has never been a case of humans getting CWD from processing and eating CWD deer in 40 years in our area or anywhere else in the nation.
I would warn you that your local state wildlife agencies may think the sky is falling down with new occurrences of CWD but this is pretty much inevitable. They won't be able to prevent the spread even with giant culling projects. Take it from our experience here in Colo, culling does nothing to prevent the spread! Prions last in the soil for years upon years. Even in areas where they've culled just about every deer, CWD still is alive in the soil and gradually spreads to adjacent areas. Pretty much every corner of Colo has CWD even though they almost eliminated deer within the CWD hot zone when it first got started.
I really think there is a lot more to worry about than CWD. Poor habitat, predators, auto collisions, and other disease such as EHD likely have more long-term negative impacts.
There is not much that can be done at this point, but i disagree with your viewpoint.
I too, live in a very high CWD area.
On 35 acres, we’ve maintained a ten year 50-60% positive prevalence, proven by testing, with mule deer bucks.
The bucks we kill look very healthy, but continue to test positive.
It’s not so much in my opinion, about a catastrophic die-off.
It’s when the prevalence rate gets above 50%, and the herd becomes inundated, it’ll never recover.
Just because you see big bucks, doesn’t mean there isn’t a steep decline in the number of mature bucks.
We too, see big bucks every year, but in my opinion they’re almost guaranteed to be positive, and they’ll be dead in 18-24 months…whereas they’d still be alive for it not for the inundation of CWD.
Additionally, wintering elk commingle with these highly contagious deer, absolutely raising the positive prevalence in the elk herds.
CWD is slow to move, but in the last 20 years living here I’ve absolutely seen the Change in the deer herd.
When I first moved here I’d see giants every year.
Now…not so much, and I’m a very active photographer and shed Hunter.
The change is undeniable.
The sky isn’t falling, and CWD as of today, is said to not transmit to humans.
But, prion diseases mutate.
That’s a fact.
Give it 20-40-60 years.
I’m expecting the story to change.