Mass roundup, killing of fallow deer to go ahead on Sidney Island

FLHTCUI

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I hunted the island once when it wasnt as populated with rich property owners on the strata...
It was a fun time and loads of deer.
I have mixed feelings as to the underlying motive (land claims possibly).
Rob

Parks Canada to proceed with multi-million-dollar cull after property owners on Sidney Island narrowly approved it
Author of the article:
Darron Kloster • Victoria Times Colonist
Published Mar 04, 2023

Parks Canada is going ahead with a mass roundup and kill of European #fallow deer on Sidney Island after property owners on the island narrowly approved it.
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Starting in the late fall, a contracted #company will use two expert marksmen in a helicopter and another two on the ground to “dispatch” as many of the fallow deer as #possible, Molly Clarkson, superintendent of the Gulf Islands National Park Reserve, said in an interview Friday.

The 10-day hunt will be followed by a #year-long pause to assess if there are any #survivors. A mop-up operation will follow using fencing and trained tracker dogs to flush out, contain and shoot any remaining fallow deer.

Controlled hunting and periodic culls over the years have reduced the number of fallow deer on the island from thousands in the 1980s to an estimated 400 to 500.

The cull, which will be undertaken by a company called Coastal Conservation, is part of a $5.9-million contract that will also see native plants species restored on Sidney Island. The goal is to eventually restore the #endangered Garry oak and Douglas fir #ecosystems that have been ravaged by the #fallow deer and overrun by invasive plants like English hawthorn and Scotch broom.

The cull and continued management of the black-tailed deer population #represents the majority of the overall contract, about $4.5 million, according to Parks Canada.

The decision to move forward with the cull came Friday following a narrow 52% vote in favour by the Sallas Forest Strata Corp. A total of 99 votes were cast.

The Sidney Island property owners, who own 1,500 hectares in 111 bare-land-strata lots, had the final say on whether the cull would go ahead. It has long been a #sensitive subject among owners, who were split between favouring a mass kill and continuing to reduce the numbers of deer though seasonal hunting.

Parks Canada controls about 440 hectares on the north end of the island — including Sidney Spit — as part of Gulf Islands National Park Reserve. It’s leading the restoration initiative with the First Nations of the W̱SÁNEĆ Leadership Council, Pauquachin First Nation, the province, Islands Trust Conservancy and strata residents.
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Eric Pelkey, hereditary chief of the Tsawout Nation and representative of the W̱SÁNEĆ Leadership Council, said Friday that ridding Sidney Island of the destructive fallow deer “is a great occasion for our people.”

European fallow deer were #introduced on neighbouring James Island in 1902 as prey for hunting #parties. The spotted deer with large #antlers invaded Sidney Island in the early 1960s, when ponds were dug and the first standing fresh water became #available to sustain them.

Their numbers grew to the thousands in the 1980s, damaging Garry oak meadows, Douglas firs and dozens of native plant species, including “medicine plants” beneficial to First Nations, said Pelkey.

“We have to correct the ecological imbalances on the island,” said Pelkey. “Our people have been going out and looking for medicines, but they can no longer be found … the fallow deer take everything.”
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First Nations want to see Sidney Island return to the natural state when their ancestors had an active village and burial grounds there. Pelkey said edible and medicinal plants such as camas and ferns were plentiful and native black-tailed deer caused far less damage.

Clarkson said Sidney Island is considered one of the least ecologically diverse islands in the Gulf Islands because of the deer and invasive plants.

She said an assessment process outlining all aspects of the restoration and cull will be open for the public to view and comment on prior to the fallow deer hunt, on the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada website at iaac-aeic.gc.ca.

Measures to ensure public safety will be in place during the hunt and cull, said Clarkson. The hunters will be using high-powered rifles.
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Clarkson said representatives of the B.C. SPCA will be present as observers during the eradication on the ground. “We have been working closely with the animal-care community to ensure that plans are focused on causing as little stress as possible [on the fallow deer],” she said.

Pelkey said First Nations will take part in harvesting the fallow deer for meat and hides.

Michael Law, spokesman for the strata owners on Sidney Island who ultimately gave the green light on the cull, said killing the fallow deer was a “necessary first step” to remove an invasive species that is causing significant damage to the ecosystem.

He said while Sidney Island strata owners had different visions on restoring balance, “the goal of all involved was to do what’s in the best interest of the island.”

“The close vote indicates how carefully everyone was thinking about it,” said Law. “I don’t see it as dividing the community. It’s tight knit.”

Coastal Conservation has been involved in deer culls before. In 2017, it was part of a plan on Haida Gwaii to eradicate Sitka black-tailed deer, which were introduced there for hunting in 1898.

The federal government spent $5.7 million on the program, as it fell within Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve.

In 2017, a total of 598 deer were shot from March to October and their meat was distributed for food on Haida Gwaii. Hunters fired rifles from low-flying helicopters and from the ground with tracking dogs. Shooting also took place from boats along the shoreline.
 
The scotch broom will be harder to get rid of than the fallow deer…

Damn stuff is a plague on the gulf islands and saanich peninsula and near impossible to contain.

The GINPR portion of prevost is littered with it, not to mention the occasional feral goat
 
Two guys shooting from helicopters, and two more on the ground, is hardly a "Mass roundup, killing of fallow deer to go ahead on Sidney Island".

What a crap headline!
 
Why not let hunters do these culls point pelee here in Essex let’s the local natives come out and cull deer when they have too.

This would make more sense economically. Issue 5 tags per hunter at $/tag. Government gets free clean up and hunters fill their freezers. Why we as tax payer put up with them wasting our natural resources and tax dollars to do it is mind boggling
 
This would make more sense economically. Issue 5 tags per hunter at $/tag. Government gets free clean up and hunters fill their freezers. Why we as tax payer put up with them wasting our natural resources and tax dollars to do it is mind boggling

Well, it is the Federal Government after all.
Prolly a distant cousin of some slack azz Liberal hack getting the kickback by bringing in the Kiwis' to do the work.
Thats why they dont do the tag thing or hire Canadians to do the work.
Rob
 
FLHTCUI, thanks for posting. These kinds of actions by our government absolutely sickens me. Article states that the Federal Government spent $5.7 Million in 2017 to kill 598 deer. That would be a cost of $9531.77 per deer.

What I find particularly offensive is the fact that there are so many people such as myself who have spent a great deal of time and money to secure habitat through purchase that is ideal for wildlife and it's conservation. Guys like me and many of you in this forum are literally paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to purchase private property to have both a place for wildlife to live and a place to hunt. We are also being forced through coercion and fear of fines or confiscation of personal property to purchase licenses to hunt just one deer on our own land. Yet, at the same time, our government is spending an exorbitant amount of money to kill deer that could instead be generating a small fortune through a combination of trophy hunts and annual sustainable quotas for local residents/Provincial residents.

I also found it interesting that Sidney Island is 2140 acres in size. That means they killed 1 deer for every 3.8 acres. The article brings up that in the 1980's they believed there were thousands of deer on Sidney Island. If we assume "thousands of deer" means 3000 animals, this would put the fallow deer density at 1.4 animals per acre. Some of the finest deer hunting in North America is in the US state of Iowa and the midwest, yet their deer densities might only approach 75 deer per square mile. That would mean Sidney Island had a deer density nearly 12 times that of the finest deer hunting in North America and approximately 896 animals per square mile!

I find that a very unlikely density. Even in ideal deer habitat in the most intensely managed ranches in the United States with extensive breeding programs and supplemental feed taylored to producing superior genetics and with no predation, densities are not even close to these numbers in free range hunt ranches. Penned breeding operations might have densities that high but not in wild herds.

In any event, this serves as another example of why government cannot be trusted to effectively and efficiently manage our resources. Government cannot and will not act in the best interests of wildlife or Canadians. We must always stand by our principles and remind government whose interests they serve. For when we fail to hold them accountable they will always act irresponsibly if given the opportunity.
 
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I would suggest going to your MLA and MP’s about some of these issues. Another drain on taxpayer money to appease the landowners and so some politicians didn’t have to do any more work than absolutely needed. I have heard these cull talks first hand years ago (hogs in Sask) and know there are a few members of a council that are not willing to do the leg work or have conversations that could help these situations and tax payers end up footing the bill. I do not agree with the bureaucracy of these “culls”. I cannot speak to the demographics/regional property break out on Sidney,, but if the issues with over-population (which seems to be debated ) relate directly to the accessibility to the private land, then I think the the land owners should be proportionally responsible for the direct costs of these culls. This may prompt a more direct and fluid conversation between land owners and the hunting community. Money has a funny way of doing those things.

We have issues of overpopulation in isolated areas similar in size to the islands in elk/mule deer country in the southern and central regions of Saskatchewan . Double cow tags and doe supplemental are dolled out in the hopes we can drop more than one per season on the 25-30% of the accessible habitat. The new no trespassing/no hunting and no access signs keep sprouting up like noxious weeds. Then these puttsy land owners have the nerve to demand wildlife related insurances and non invasive conservation strategies to have more effective results. I am pleased these narrow minded fools have their issues, but it’s unjustly an even bigger issue for everyone else who may have an interest in the health of our wildlife.
 
WOW! They are going to use high powered rifles to shoot the fallow deer! MUST be THOSE BABY KILLING AS FAST AS THE TRIGGER IS PULLED EVIL AR-15's
 
Wide open season, no bag limits, access to the land and hunting to non resident!
Done!
 
Interesting that the local Natives are participating for meat and hides when hunting Fallow Deer is literally the definition of the White Man's Tradition.
 
A big problem on the islands with feral, non-native, deer and goats over the years is the landowners that have prevented any harvesting of these animals.
 
A big problem on the islands with feral, non-native, deer and goats over the years is the landowners that have prevented any harvesting of these animals.

Ayup.

For the money they are spending, on a 2000 acre island, they need to bring in three or four truckloads of folks to be Beaters, set up some catchement areas, and pens, along with a decent truck mounted kill/slaughter facility.

They could run a couple drives, set up their fences and have at another as the meat crew does their thing, be in and back out in two days. And not at $8K per animal, either.

The honest truth though, is I figure the deer should be left the hell alone, until ALL the folks on the Island decide that they need to be dealt with, and then they can get on with it on their own, rather than the Government pounding money into what is essentially not the Government's problem.
 
Hunting seasons with tags wont lesson the herd much. Remember most deer hunters have to fall on a deer to get one. After the work of one deer many will just go home . If you ever hunted on Camp Wainwright in the deer seasons there if you out in the woods you won't ever see another hunter they are all in the easy spots.
 
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