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Author Topic: Stop pussy-footing around  (Read 7373 times)

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Offline Rebel SS

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Lotsa deer. Grind 'em up and send it to China. They eat all sorts of questionable stuff.
« Last Edit: December 12/04/18, 07:37:08 PM by Rebel SS »

Offline K.O.W.

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Might as well blast em all cwd ehd hoof and hoof disease I mean man wow they are spending way too much on cwd invasive specie etc. we get a sick deer around here and we're burying it deep as ever. Every neighbor within 4 miles of here agrees.

Offline deadeye

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Steve-o is right "That is the beauty of deer hunting.  They are so unpredictable".  I'm sure we all have stories to tell about deer and scent.  I have seen them walk directly down wind and not give notice as well as some that simply would not cross the path I walked in on.  Go figure.
***I started out with nothing, and I still have most of it.***

Offline delcecchi

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Steve-o is right "That is the beauty of deer hunting.  They are so unpredictable".  I'm sure we all have stories to tell about deer and scent.  I have seen them walk directly down wind and not give notice as well as some that simply would not cross the path I walked in on.  Go figure.

And I have 4 or 5 that stand around by my birdfeeder and look in the window.   Or eat the apples off the ground.   My having walked in the yard doesn't seem to bother them  :laugh: :smiley:

Offline Rebel SS

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Offline Rebel SS

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  • "Seems like time is here and gone".....Doobie's
DNR News Release

For Immediate Release:

Dec. 5, 2018  3:00 PM

Wild deer identified as presumptive positive for CWD outside of disease management zone; first in Houston County
A wild deer harvested in Houston County on Nov. 17 has been identified as presumptive positive for chronic wasting disease, the Department of Natural Resources said. Official confirmation will come later this week. The hunter has been notified and the DNR is making arrangements to pick up the meat and carcass.

It is the first detection of the neurological disease in Houston County since testing began in 2002.

If confirmed positive, the DNR will offer landowner shooting permits in the area around where the deer was harvested and continue to collect samples as opportunities arise through deer-vehicle collisions or archery harvest. The DNR also will consider special hunts in January or February, depending on results from additional samples. 

“While disappointing, this discovery is not unexpected given the proximity of this deer permit area to areas where CWD has been found,” said Lou Cornicelli, wildlife research manager for the DNR. The buck was harvested 8.5 miles from a Winona County deer farm where a deer tested positive for CWD in 2017 and 9.5 miles from the Wisconsin border. CWD is established in wild deer in western Wisconsin and northern Iowa.

Eleven other deer were harvested off of the same property, in deer permit area (DPA) 346, none of which tested positive for CWD.

“We’ll work closely with the Minnesota Board of Animal Health on our detections, so they can define their endemic areas,” said Cornicelli.

The Board of Animal Health regulates captive deer and elk in the state. The board creates endemic areas based on the location of wild detections of CWD. The purpose is to control and monitor farmed cervid herds in the area.

The DNR responds to and manages CWD in wild deer, part of a cooperative effort to detect and contain the disease.

Complete CWD test results from southeastern Minnesota are available on the DNR website at mndnr.gov/cwdcheck. Any additional deer harvested during current and upcoming 2018 deer seasons in the disease management zone that test positive for CWD will be reported on this CWD results web page. The DNR will directly notify any hunter who harvests a deer that tests positive. Complete information for hunters about CWD for current and upcoming hunting seasons is online at mndnr.gov/cwd.

Find more background information about CWD in southeastern Minnesota in a
Nov. 30 news release at go.usa.gov/xPtVn.

###
« Last Edit: December 12/05/18, 04:48:37 PM by Rebel SS »

Offline Steve-o

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