Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopefully many of them have starved to death or frozen in the last 3 weeks.
We need a 90+% reduction in the deer population. They are overgrazing our forests and enabling invasive plants to take over.
They are indigenous animals. We are invasive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopefully many of them have starved to death or frozen in the last 3 weeks.
We need a 90+% reduction in the deer population. They are overgrazing our forests and enabling invasive plants to take over.
They are indigenous animals. We are invasive.
Anonymous wrote:Hopefully many of them have starved to death or frozen in the last 3 weeks.
We need a 90+% reduction in the deer population. They are overgrazing our forests and enabling invasive plants to take over.
Anonymous wrote:Hopefully many of them have starved to death or frozen in the last 3 weeks.
We need a 90+% reduction in the deer population. They are overgrazing our forests and enabling invasive plants to take over.
Anonymous wrote:I saw at least 2 dead on the side if the road this week somewhere between Fairfax County and Clarke County.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Deer do not hibernate.
They also are not able to safely migrate when rare, severe, storms like this hit us like this.
I hear you OP. I wonder if what we should be doing is arranging a temporary transport program, to move the deer someplace warmer, further south, until the storm and severe weather passes, and then bring them back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopefully many of them have starved to death or frozen in the last 3 weeks.
We need a 90+% reduction in the deer population. They are overgrazing our forests and enabling invasive plants to take over.
I have lived on my property roughly in the midst of 1000s of acres of conservation land for 30+ years
Even through the worst winters the deer and turkeys still show up every spring with their fawns and poults.
As fragile as birds are, they did actually appear to have survived at least one major global extermination event, like lots of fish and reptiles who are also basically survivors of the Jurassic age.
I just wonder that you’d actually want harmless mammals to “starve to death or freeze” over some rambling bamboo or something.
You literally sound like a psychopath. No one sane says things like that.
Anonymous wrote:Hopefully many of them have starved to death or frozen in the last 3 weeks.
We need a 90+% reduction in the deer population. They are overgrazing our forests and enabling invasive plants to take over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Deer do not hibernate.
They also are not able to safely migrate when rare, severe, storms like this hit us like this.
I hear you OP. I wonder if what we should be doing is arranging a temporary transport program, to move the deer someplace warmer, further south, until the storm and severe weather passes, and then bring them back.