- Joined
- Sep 1, 2020
- Messages
- 2,157
Great...even less population of deer to hunt!Be prepared for Mass Extermination by you friendly DNR or Conservation!!! Lol!
Be prepared for Mass Extermination by you friendly DNR or Conservation!!! Lol!
It was prolly just a snowbird deer from up north somewhere not a local.It was inevitable. It’s been in Bama and some of our surrounding states for a couple years. I just hope the FWC has a real plan for how to handle it. On the bright side, the only time I hunt the “pan handle” is St Vincent’s so…. Here’s hoping it doesn’t make its way to North East or central Fl
One county in Alabama has had at least 3 confirmed cases. This one hit on the side of our road was less than 40 miles from the Al/Ga line so that’s pretty unsettling. The pan handle of our state is where the largest deer in Florida are located. It’s the part of the state that gets the coldest temps ect…. I’m really hoping our wild life commission is prepared for this and can educate the general hunting population on how to cull or handle this disease.It was prolly just a snowbird deer from up north somewhere not a local.
Cant cull or handle it really. About all that can be done is bone out the deer and dont sever the spinal column until the edible meat is removed. Dont use the same blade on meat that you use to remove the head. Keep on keepin on.One county in Alabama has had at least 3 confirmed cases. This one hit on the side of our road was less than 40 miles from the Al/Ga line so that’s pretty unsettling. The pan handle of our state is where the largest deer in Florida are located. It’s the part of the state that gets the coldest temps ect…. I’m really hoping our wild life commission is prepared for this and can educate the general hunting population on how to cull or handle this disease.
That is a very real possibility. Especially since most deer farms (especially the exotic deer hunts) don’t seem to follow rules for testing and transfer of livestock…. Or perhaps out of state hunters not following the rules for bringing game and deer carcasses back home? Although that seems like it would be harder to spread via this manner in my opinionIf you look at the history of the spread of CWD into many areas, it seems to make no sense in that it many times moved long distances without affecting deer in between where the infection was and now is. I think the biggest driver of CWD introduction is deer farms and their practice of trading deer.