Shed Horn hunters destroying the mule deer herds!
Anonymous
3/8/04 7:59pm
What do you people think? I have gone out into some of the wintering grounds of the mule deer herds around here and the shed hunters are destroying it. We are talking about critical winter range that is already at a very low carrying capacity because of drought killing the sage brush back. You add shed hunters out there on their Fat Cats, Big Wheels and Four wheelers running back and forth killing what winter forage is left there and I would have to say that shed hunters are busy destroying these mule deer herds. What do you guys think?
BlandingBowman
BlandingBowman
5,849
I know that in some areas that sightseers, tourists, etc. may be an influence and pressure the animals, but, I have never seen or heard of those people getting together in groups of 12-20 or more people with atv's and someone in the air in a parachute plane spotting for them and then chasing any big trophy sized buck they see, that still has his antlers, until they fall off and they can pick them up. Shed hunting has gone from individuals out looking, to companies bringing employees out and setting up grids across sage flats and covering every square inch of it on atvs. It is a $$ thing. It is all about greed. They know that they can make money selling these huge sheds so they don't take chances that they will not be the one picking it up. I have came into an area that was closed to off road travel and seen where the entire sage flat has been covered with atv tracks. When you already have 60% of the sage dead form the drought then that is pretty significant impact to what sage is left. That is also pretty significant impact to the deer herd.
BlandingBowman
Anyway, I think we are both in agreement that something has to be done. Sure is a shame that the animals really have no escape anymore, yet we continue to push them at every opportunity. It's doing nothing but destroy what most of us here really enjoy, and that's hunting... with that possibility of bagging the animal of a lifetime. Those animals are getting more and more scarce as the years go by.