- Location
- Western Manitoba
Potashminer, does your area not normally have both bow and blackpowder seasons open in October?
I'm curious; were those helicopter snipers shooting only mulies, or was the goal (as I had heard elsewhere) to eliminate all deer of either species in the area? Was there a regular whitetail rifle season there that year? Did you hunt it? If so, did you test your kill, and how long did that take? Did you notice a significant difference in deer sightings during the season?
I like being able to discuss this here, in relative anonymity. If we were to meet in person, I would be too frightened to freely converse with you...an apparent dissident, and so therefore a likely person "of interest" to our lizard overlords.![]()
I no longer hunt with either bow or black powder, so I do not know what seasons were open around here.
Helicopters were shooting ALL cervids - white tail, mule deer, moose, elk - or so we were told. Idea was claimed to reduce herd to limit spread of CWD, yet not a thing we are aware of done about the prions in dirt or plants around here - sort of pointless - somebody in Winnipeg had a budget of taxpayer money - so spend it on "stuff" that occurs way out in boonies and claim whatever, afterwards. There had been a first ever mule deer season, and three white tail deer season here in "normal" hunting times - the "cull" occurred in January, mostly - long after the hunting season was done with. I have not been out to hunt deer for several years - by any means - but I see them in our yard or on the way into town, most every trip. Not near as many as there was a few years ago - and, as posted - not sure that I have seen a mule deer, since that cull.
An acquaintance has half section in Manitoba about 5 miles from here - he does not hunt - lives in Saskatchewan - was given two deer carcasses by Manitoba DNR in return to giving permission for them to "cull" over his land. West side of his land holding is the Manitoba/Saskatchewan border - I saw an elk cross in front of me when I was out there, on his land, earlier this year.
We live on the West bank of Lake of the Prairies - you can look on-line for what zone we are in - what seasons are open and when.
I was hunting Saskatchewan zone 46 for years before and after CWD came to Canada - first reported / noticed in that zone - around a game farm near Neilburg, Sask. I've had many dozen head tested over the years - never had one come back as positive analysis. That I know of, neither did my Dad, who lived in Unity, Sask - for many decades.
It will be like heresy to say so, but I believe the prion is moved around by transport trucks hauling live animals from game farm to game farm. Is mostly based, that until two years ago, Manitoba never reported a case. Ontario had not either - maybe still has not - yet endemic in Saskatchewan, Alberta and Quebec. I simply do not believe that a prion infected animal walked across Manitoba and Ontario to Quebec to start an outbreak there - more likely was a truck that trailered the living animals there - no adequate quarantines or testing by relevant authorities or operators (of trucks or farms). I understand that an animal can be spreading CWD prions for months, or possibly years, before displaying symptoms, themselves.
Last edited: