As you walk the downtown streets, and area of Cranbrook B.C you will often see and meet, not only your domestic house pets, but the many urban deer walking through your yard or down the streets. The deer in the area are usually not harmful and will usually run away if approached. The deer in the area only bother the people by eating there well thought out gardens, trees and plants. In the spring the deer can be a little more aggressive and have known to stalk, and attack animals as to protect their newborn fawns. The deer have been an ongoing problem in the community. There has been a deer cull activated in the past few years, allowing an organization to catch and kill up to 20-50 deer per cull. Some say this is inhumane as the deer are trapped…
The Whitetail Deer is useful to humans in many ways. Many people are deer farmers, this is a very profitable business, you can sell the scents and if one dies you can sell the meat and fur. Many people also enjoy deer hunting. During the fall you can purchase a Whitetail Deer hunting license. This allows you to harvest one deer per year. On average 1.5 million licenses are sold in Michigan alone.…
A young deer has strayed away from her herd and is innocently grazing on grass. Ten yards away, a hungry wolf pack slowly stalks toward the fawn after trailing her for days. The deer senses what's happening and darts away, but it's too late, the fawn is as good as dead. The snowy terrain works to the wolf's’ advantage, with their huge paws acting like snowshoes. The wolves advance as their strongest member leads the chase. The pups watch from the sidelines as the deer quickly tires out. The head wolf quickly latches on to the fawn’s nose and brings her to the ground. The deer thrashes as more wolves come and attack her. Not long after, the fawn gives up her fight and the wolves feast.…
As the population of whitetail deer continues to rise in Kentucky, chances of taking one increase as well. In “Kentucky Deer Season 2013: Hunting Forecast” Darren Warner of OutdoorLife.com states that “The current statewide population estimate for Kentucky's deer herd is about 900,000 animals.” Due to the abundancy of deer, during the apocalypse they will be a great source of food for you and your group. However, after the kill, most hunters do not know what to do next, and those who do often do not take the most ethical route to processing a deer. Compocalypse students need to know how to efficiently process a deer because venison will provide large, protein packed meal during the apocalypse and can also provide skin to make clothing out of,…
White tailed Deer She looked left and then right. When she saw it was all clear;, the whitetail deer dashed across the opening with her fawn. She is looking for a safe place for her fawn to play and for her to eat. Whitetail deer depend on their environment for survival, but people can also help them survive with proper management practices. Whitetail deer are herbivores, leisurely grazing on most available plant foods.…
Wildlife/Vehicle collisions (WVC), primarily deer, are increasing mortality rates of our natural wildlife populations beyond predation and other environmental factors. Wildlife management practices and the lack of predation have caused more wildlife/vehicle collisions because the numbers of deer and other wildlife commonly hit on our roads and highways have been on a sharp incline since the harsh winter of 1996. The increasing necessity of our automobiles, combined with the overlap in urban areas (urban sprawl) and wildlife habitat in the U.S., has given wildlife little choice but to venture onto our roads and highways. This phenomenon has caused many issues that people are aware of but they feel that there is little that can be done. There have been other countries and states that have attempted to educate and even take steps to reduce wildlife/vehicle collisions through…
Kilpatrick, H.J., Eccleston, K.A., and Ellingwood, M.R. (1996) Attitudes and perceptions of a suburban community experiencing deer/human conflicts. Transactions Northeast Fish Wildlife Conference 52, 19.…
As the years have past the more I have learned about hunting and all the things that go along with it. I have been in eight different states hunting over the past ten years and have had the opportunity to harvest numerous trophy deer in most of the states I have visited. It takes knowing how deer think, and what they like as far as food and times they like to move the most through out the day. At different times of the year deer prefer different food sources, usually they tend to go straight for the greener food than anything else.…
Hunting is helpful for the environment and for you. Hunters also argue that hunting is helpful for the deer population. Proponents argue that hunting is an effective form of deer management because it will remove a number of individual deer from a population and prevent those individuals from reproducing.(Lin1). Such as killing management deer with bad genetics that is hurting the population. Deer meat is better for you than processed meats.(wildliferecourse2)Deer hunting can also help to feed the less fortunate.(wildliferecourse2) Hunting also helps stop the spread of Lymes disease by killing the over running population that carry the disease.…
Hunting was once considered a test of courage and manhood. Now it is a fight between a predator and a prey, it is just the killing of defenseless animals. This "sport" that people call hunting is a dangerous thing and it can cause animals’ serious pain. Getting rid of this "sport" will benefit ourselves as we will keep the balance in nature.…
Hunting also leads to animal population control. Although some predators have been eliminated, today that role is being filled by man who enjoys hunting deer for sport. Therefore, the hunting is necessary to restore nature's balance.…
Many animals suffer prolonged, painful deaths when they are injured by hunters. Bowhunters often spend hours tracking the blood trails of animals before finding them. Many are never found by hunters.(9) Our office routinely receives reports from upset residents who spot animals wandering around with gunshot wounds or protruding arrows. In cases in which euthanasia is not feasible, weeks can elapse before victims succumb to their injuries. It is also not uncommon for us to hear of wounded animals running wildly onto highways, posing grave risks to commuters.…
There is no doubt that animal rights are greatly disrupted in a state bear hunt. In fact, the New Jersey Department of Environment Protection starts that 120 out of 182 bears killed (66%) one day on a bear hunt were females, and generally no more than 35-45% of female bears should be killed. "When the proportion of the female kill exceeds 40%, there is a danger that the population is being over exploited. Continuing this hunt may cause long-term irreparable harm to the population."…
It’s close to 7 a.m. when I see gray shapes slip out of the tree line. The thrill that shoots up my spine wipes the November cold from my limbs. There’s something primal about the first sight of game. Alert and careful, the column of whitetail deer emerges for breakfast. A peek through the binoculars reveals they’re all does exactly what I’m looking for. I wait for them to calm down and start browsing on the edge between the forest and the field. Even from 100 yards away, the deer sense that something isn’t quite right. Every few seconds the lead doe’s head bolts upward with her eyes and ears locked on my location; her nostrils test the air but the wind is in my favor. I dare not blink. When her head eases down in search of another acorn I make my move, raising my gun slowly until I’m in a solid, seated position. I pull the stock tight to my shoulder and cheek, rest my triceps on my knees and dig my heels into the earth to anchor the whole package into a steady platform. I take a breath and exhale most of it as the crosshairs settle into a small orbit on her shoulder—it’s never as steady as it is in the movies. I lose sight of her from the recoil of my gun after I take my shot. The sound of the bullet’s impact echoes across the thick morning air and lets me know that bullet found its mark.…
>>>"Resources for all creatures is finite. Humans and deer (and other game animals) need room to live, but the room to roam and populate has it's limits. For example, deer populations need to be restricted by the available food limits of their respective habitats. Without hunting, the deer population would grow to the point of encroaching into human areas far worse than now, causing safety issues for humans and animals (many more vehicle/deer collision), and human crops being overrun by a deer population explosion; more deer require more food.<<<…