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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
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Cooler
weather aids local hunters A change in the
weather helped mule deer hunters after a slow-starting opening weekend September
28-29.
Biologist Stephen George of
the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife said success rates for opening
weekend were at about 8 percent, down from a 10-12 percent average.
However, when weather turned
chilly at the beginning of the week and snow began to fly in the higher
elevations, rifle hunters began to score.
"With this cooler weather
and the snow we've been having... the success rate really jumped up,"
George said.
He reported preliminary statistics
of 18 percent success early this week.
Cool weather allows deer to
move around more comfortably during the day and snow allows hunters to
track them more easily.
George reported improved success
rates in the Upper Deschutes Unit (Highway 242 to Highway 58; Highway
97 to Pacific Crest).
In recent years, that unit
has been hovering at 5 percent success rates.
This season, that rate jumped
to 9 percent.
However, the Metolius Unit
(Highway 242 north to the Warm Springs Reservation) has dropped significantly,
down to a 5 percent success rate.
George fears that the deer
population has suffered from an invasion of Adenovirus, a hemmorhagic
disease that was identified in Crooked River Ranch last spring and crept
to the Sisters area this summer.
"We're now getting some in
Tollgate," George reported.
The disease, which does not
affect humans or domestic animals, causes massive internal bleeding in
the lungs and gastro-intestinal track.
It can kill a healthy deer
in five days, though not all deer that are exposed die from the disease.
George believes the disease
may have impacted populations in the Metolius unit, making deer less numerous.
However, he encouraged hunters
to get out in the woods now, while conditions are optimal for finding
deer.
"The deer are there," George
said.
"When we have a little bit
of weather like this, take advantage of it." |
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