JREG19
Lil-Rokslider
Feb 3 and 4th, I volunteered with the Idaho Wild Sheep Foundation to capture Bighorn Sheep with the Idaho Department of Fish and Game.
I'm writing this to encourage you to be a part of the Wild Sheep Foundation on a national and local level. Sheep do not support themselves like deer and elk, there's just not enough tags to get the proper funding.
I got an email the week before the capture, saying they needed volunteers. I knew I had to be a part of it. This was my first time volunteering with IDWSF.
The captures that I was apart of were along the Salmon River. The main objective was to catch 8 ewes that had previously tested positive for Movi (a respiratory disease). We wanted to see: do they still test positive? Are they positive but relatively healthy? Are they positive and sick (etc.)? if they test positive twice, they are culled.
The process: a plane would fly around using telemetry to find the Sheep. After the plane found them, he radioed to a helicopter with their location. The helicopter would then try to find the specific ewes that previously tested positive (they call them "dirty girls"). Once the dirty girls were identified, a crew member used a net gun to capture the Sheep. After the Sheep was caught a "mugger" would go down, blind fold, and hobble the Sheep. After the Sheep was hobbled they put her in a "sling" and attached her to the bottom of the helicopter and flew her to us at the "sling site." Once the Sheep touched down, we got her over to a scale and weighed her. After we weighed her, we laid her down on a tarp and immediately checked her temperature. If she was too warm we put snow and water on her to cool her down. We kept a constant eye on that temperature. Then all at the same time we got an age on her, we took blood, a nasal swab, an ultrasound of her back to make sure she had a good amount of fat, we also did an ultrasound to see if she was pregnant, we looked for scabies and any other injuries, finally we added ear tags and a GPS collar to track them. Once we were done with our testing we carried them away from our tools and released her. We caught 15 ewes the first day and I think 18 the second.
This was a pretty amazing experience and I encourage any one who has the opportunity to go on one of these, to do it.
It was hard to get some good pics because of all the people.
![20240203_153402.jpg 20240203_153402.jpg](https://forumdata.rokslide.com/file/forumdata/data/attachments/643/643028-578083ef782affb516dbddf981041c3a.jpg)
![20240203_121555.jpg 20240203_121555.jpg](https://forumdata.rokslide.com/file/forumdata/data/attachments/643/643029-dabdc7f825d9cfe0c7c49c6ba4a95688.jpg)
![20240203_120617.jpg 20240203_120617.jpg](https://forumdata.rokslide.com/file/forumdata/data/attachments/643/643030-ff8241274c7226c42e8aae57bbc781dc.jpg)
![20240204_135309.jpg 20240204_135309.jpg](https://forumdata.rokslide.com/file/forumdata/data/attachments/643/643031-44f0e1060ea1fac48dfb56fa0f804b98.jpg)
I'm writing this to encourage you to be a part of the Wild Sheep Foundation on a national and local level. Sheep do not support themselves like deer and elk, there's just not enough tags to get the proper funding.
I got an email the week before the capture, saying they needed volunteers. I knew I had to be a part of it. This was my first time volunteering with IDWSF.
The captures that I was apart of were along the Salmon River. The main objective was to catch 8 ewes that had previously tested positive for Movi (a respiratory disease). We wanted to see: do they still test positive? Are they positive but relatively healthy? Are they positive and sick (etc.)? if they test positive twice, they are culled.
The process: a plane would fly around using telemetry to find the Sheep. After the plane found them, he radioed to a helicopter with their location. The helicopter would then try to find the specific ewes that previously tested positive (they call them "dirty girls"). Once the dirty girls were identified, a crew member used a net gun to capture the Sheep. After the Sheep was caught a "mugger" would go down, blind fold, and hobble the Sheep. After the Sheep was hobbled they put her in a "sling" and attached her to the bottom of the helicopter and flew her to us at the "sling site." Once the Sheep touched down, we got her over to a scale and weighed her. After we weighed her, we laid her down on a tarp and immediately checked her temperature. If she was too warm we put snow and water on her to cool her down. We kept a constant eye on that temperature. Then all at the same time we got an age on her, we took blood, a nasal swab, an ultrasound of her back to make sure she had a good amount of fat, we also did an ultrasound to see if she was pregnant, we looked for scabies and any other injuries, finally we added ear tags and a GPS collar to track them. Once we were done with our testing we carried them away from our tools and released her. We caught 15 ewes the first day and I think 18 the second.
This was a pretty amazing experience and I encourage any one who has the opportunity to go on one of these, to do it.
It was hard to get some good pics because of all the people.
![20240203_153402.jpg 20240203_153402.jpg](https://forumdata.rokslide.com/file/forumdata/data/attachments/643/643028-578083ef782affb516dbddf981041c3a.jpg)
![20240203_121555.jpg 20240203_121555.jpg](https://forumdata.rokslide.com/file/forumdata/data/attachments/643/643029-dabdc7f825d9cfe0c7c49c6ba4a95688.jpg)
![20240203_120617.jpg 20240203_120617.jpg](https://forumdata.rokslide.com/file/forumdata/data/attachments/643/643030-ff8241274c7226c42e8aae57bbc781dc.jpg)
![20240204_135309.jpg 20240204_135309.jpg](https://forumdata.rokslide.com/file/forumdata/data/attachments/643/643031-44f0e1060ea1fac48dfb56fa0f804b98.jpg)