Mustangs Rule
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2021
- Messages
- 699
If any hunter grants himself an honest examination of the effects of people on wildlife, on the earth, all he could do is lower his head.
With farming, ranching, logging, canned hunts, land development, releasing CO2 and importing wildlife to places it never belonged, we have plagued nature and us with CWD, Lyme’s, Blue Tongue, Chronic Hair Loss, Sarcoptic Mange, lead poisoning, climate change and recently Elk Hoof Rot.
These are the real “predators” dropping game populations.
Like Gill Rot that infects salmon when denied enough clean, cold water to spawn, the basis for all this suffering of wildlife, and the earth are people, too often businesses that care not.
This began before most of us were born and will continue after we have died. Sometimes the wrongdoer is just watering a lawn in the west when water has become gold.
Comparing maps of both Oregon and Washington, looking where wolves and elk hoof rot are, mostly they do not overlap, except in SE Washington and NE Oregon.
It is my deepest hope that wolves can, by culling out infected elk early, help bring this terrible and seemingly unstoppable plague of elk at bay somewhere.
When that happens, I will lift my head a bit higher.
With farming, ranching, logging, canned hunts, land development, releasing CO2 and importing wildlife to places it never belonged, we have plagued nature and us with CWD, Lyme’s, Blue Tongue, Chronic Hair Loss, Sarcoptic Mange, lead poisoning, climate change and recently Elk Hoof Rot.
These are the real “predators” dropping game populations.
Like Gill Rot that infects salmon when denied enough clean, cold water to spawn, the basis for all this suffering of wildlife, and the earth are people, too often businesses that care not.
This began before most of us were born and will continue after we have died. Sometimes the wrongdoer is just watering a lawn in the west when water has become gold.
Comparing maps of both Oregon and Washington, looking where wolves and elk hoof rot are, mostly they do not overlap, except in SE Washington and NE Oregon.
It is my deepest hope that wolves can, by culling out infected elk early, help bring this terrible and seemingly unstoppable plague of elk at bay somewhere.
When that happens, I will lift my head a bit higher.