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Exactly Rank well put. It looks like a fallow deer to me I wad hoping you were talking about Texad OTE=Rank Amateur;8049073]It has been suspected that the farming of exotic deer in Washington was the cause of the HLS in our Blacktails, once again commercialization leading to species demise.[/QUOTE]
Escaped deer, fallow or otherwise, is thought to be one of the ways that CWD will end up getting into Michigan. So many people are jealous and selfish when it comes to utilizing Michigan's natural resources and that will destroy outdoor heritage.
The difference in NZ is they don't have a native pop all the wild deer have escaped or been released. You don't have to worry about them interbreeding with native deer or elk. The South Island has huge fenced deer herds. OTE=DogZilla15;16303565]Piscean: They farm all sorts of deer species in New Zealand also.
Those things are wierd looking.A good friend and coworker shot a fallow deer Friday morning. At his request I am not going to post pictures. It was a buck and looks like a little miniature elk. Where are these deer native to?
IF your ground is alive you can study fallow areas around you for hints of what your leaving it go might do. A nearby field I used to be able to see across several years ago is prime deer cover today. Bedding , cover , travel routes. Enough browse for daytime deer to still use it. All volunteer growth. Pines. Autumn olive. Grasses. Thistles.
A big field of goldenrod is close to a surefire deer magnet in farm country; such fields aren't as common as they were a couple decades ago, with the decline in abundance of fallow and CRP ground associated with the ascendancy of rowcrop acreage. With their winter coats, deer are virtually invisible when standing in a field of November goldenrod.
A buddy of mine shot one 6-7 years ago in eastern Genesee county that had escaped from a pen.It was in the Davison area about 3-4 weeks prior and the Davison police were chasing it around town for a couple days and could not get it.Chuck ended up getting it with his muzzle loader about 5 miles out of town and as said 3-4 weeks later.He contacted the DNR and got the entire animal but the CWD ...
Deer like to bed on any rise in the terrain. That is the purpose of the mounds. You could use a lot of different cover types for islands. What I like about the concept I posted: It allows you to work the soil every spring. This will typicaly spawn a good growth of annual weeds. Annual broadleaf offer deer a lot of good browse.
Deer density matters Vs amount of desirable browse for sure. The most desired browse gets wiped out if scarce. My oldest open fallow areas were mostly goldenrod and thistle type plants. Decent soil. Some or most deer walked around / past the property using the dirt road on one side or swamp edge on the other.
Fallow, axis and sitka deer that have escaped from captivity are also being mapped. The goal is to put this information into a Geographic Information System (GIS) and Web-friendly format that can be shared with partners and overlaid onto the Strategy's Conservation Opportunity Areas map.