New Brunswick deer numbers

Rob

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New Brunswick deer are supposedly at an all time low. And the spruce mono-culture forestry practice of the Irving corporation is most often blamed. However, yesterday I saw over 40 deer grazing on the side of the road between Fredericton and Moncton. That is about 110 miles.

They didn't look too bad...I think its been a relatively easy winter for them, so far.
 
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No, it isn't currently deer season and will not be until October.

New Brunswick deer are supposedly at an all time low. And the spruce mono-culture forestry practice of the Irving corporation is most often blamed. However, yesterday I saw over 40 deer grazing on the side of the road between Fredericton and Moncton. That is about 110 miles.

They didn't look too bad...I think its been a relatively easy winter for them, so far.

Our deer population is at an exceptional low. Our provinces flawed timber practices are certainly a contributing factor. I don't think seeing 40 deer over that distance at a time of year when deer are concentrated on limited food sources is any sort of evidence to the contrary if that was you're intent. However we have had a fairly mild winter and if weather remains good I do have optimism that things may begin to improve. If we can correct our practices of harvesting deer wintering yards and spraying the hardwood browse they need to survive the winters.
 
I hunted in the hanwell area of fredericton for 9 years. I have seen zero deer and only a few tracks in the entire time. I have shot dozens of coyotes though in the same area.
 
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Just north of Sussex you can see lots of deer in the late winter just off the highway in the pumpkin and squash fields. I was told they come from several miles to congregate there. You're right about the forest or what little is left of it.
The prov. government giving them control of crown land and another deal that gave them access to land set aside as wildlife reserve, a deal they just recently reneged on doesn't help the deer population either.
 
Just north of Sussex you can see lots of deer in the late winter just off the highway in the pumpkin and squash fields. I was told they come from several miles to congregate there. You're right about the forest or what little is left of it.
The prov. government giving them control of crown land and another deal that gave them access to land set aside as wildlife reserve, a deal they just recently reneged on doesn't help the deer population either.

There was 20 there in groups 6 about 4 hours ago. There is alot to the deer numbers. The deer population went up in the 80s as the farming business was abandoned in NB. These number peaked in the 90s as the abandoned field finally grew over and the deer numbers decreased. The coyote pop has followed the deer pop almost exactly but a Year out. Major winter events effected them nehatively in 2000s. Also almost 55% of the provincial herd is in areas not sprayed or effected by mono culutral forestry. NB deer herd is very urban. The best thing for NB deer would be a return to local food production in NB.
 
In 1985 the provincial deer herd was estimated at an all time high of 270,000, in 2014 the deer herd was down to 74,000, a decline of 70% in 30 years. The main cause of this decline was clear cut forestry and herbicide spraying these clear-cuts to control hardwood growth.
More small farms would increase this edge biodiversity that many animals use for browse and food, but this would never replace their habitat and winter yards that have been almost eliminated. The deer are virtually starving to death.
It is so sad to see the change in the forests of NB over the last forty years, manly due to the change in forestry practices from select harvest with men and chainsaws, to the clear-cut mechanized monoculture destruction.
Back in those days many men made a good living working in the woods and contributed to the economy of several small communities. Everyone that says that we have come along way in the science or methods of forestry is full of sh!t. Now to get into the game your talking investing hundreds of thousands of dollars in machinery and the decimation of one of our most valuable resources. These methods have taken hundreds of jobs from NBers.
The best way to see this destruction is to fly from Toronto to St. John on a clear day and look down, the same thing is now happening in our neighboring state of Maine, it will disgust you.
 
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