-
Category: MyView
-
Created on Wednesday, 17 October 2007 20:00
-
Last Updated on Wednesday, 17 October 2007 18:03
-
Published Date
10/18/2007
By Ky Koitzsch
I give great credit to Troy Kingsbury, owner of the Village Grocery in
Waitsfield, for establishing an official Vermont "big game" reporting
station in the Mad River Valley, and for being the driving force behind
the creation of the timber frame game pole.
Not only is it a good place to "hang" your deer (as stated in
The VR's
article last week) it also holds other important values. It is a
meeting place where Valley residents, hunters and non-hunters alike,
can observe part of the culture of deer hunting, can meet to share
stories of their experiences with wildlife, and learn more about
hunting and wildlife management in Vermont. It is a means of bringing
revenue from hunters into The Valley for small business owners. It is
an important source of biological data for state wildlife biologists to
aid in the continued management and long-term health of our Vermont
deer population. It is a venue for hunters to exhibit their
sportsmanship and respect for the animals they hunt. Hunting is part of
the fabric of Vermont's history. It is a healthy source of recreation
and a means of bringing many generations of Vermonters together to
enjoy a common bond. And, whether you are a hunter or not, you would be
hard pressed to find a better source of local, healthy red meat.
As an avid deer hunter, wildlife biologist and Mad River Valley
resident, my interest in and support for Troy's reporting station is to
reaffirm and support the tradition of deer hunting in Vermont. Like it
or not, because we have actively removed the most important natural
predators of deer from the ecosystem (wolves and cougars), and because
we continue to reduce the quality and quantity of winter habitat in
Vermont, particularly through development, hunting is the only viable
means of controlling the deer population.
Without natural predation, deer have the potential to exceed the
ability of their habitat to sustain them often resulting in high winter
mortality. For example, the deer population in Vermont was reduced to
almost half following the consecutive severe winters of 1969 and 1970.
Looking back, it was apparent that the available habitat in Vermont was
not able to support such a large deer population. Following another
harsh winter in 1979, the Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department instated
the first and very controversial antlerless deer season to help reduce
the number of deer until the habitat could regenerate to where it could
support a larger and healthier deer population. It seems now that deer
population numbers are more in sync with habitat quality and that the
State's new management plan, enacted in 2005, which restricted the age
of a buck taken to two and a half years and older by prohibiting the
harvest of "spike" bucks, is currently providing a quality deer hunting
experience in the state of Vermont and should continue doing so into
the foreseeable future.
In order for the Fish and Wildlife Department to assess the results of
their management plans, it is important to gather information from
harvested animals from reporting stations like the one at the Village
Grocery. In addition to determining the number of deer harvested in a
season, biologists gather information on the age, sex and weight of
each animal, indicators of the age structure and health of the herd.
Requiring hunters to report any deer taken at an official reporting
station is also a means of ensuring that each hunter does not exceed
his or her annual harvest limit. (For 2007, the limit is two deer per
year per hunter.) For information about hunting opportunities in
Vermont and the management of both game and non-game species, you can
contact The Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife in Waterbury at
241-3700 or look them up on-line at http://
www.vtfishandwildlife.com /.
In the Mad River Valley, there was a need for a local big game
reporting station as the closest two are in Roxbury and Northfield.
Troy reports that, as of October 16, hunters from 15 different towns
including Williston, Middlebury, North Ferrisburg, and even Highgate
Center have brought their deer in to be weighed and recorded at the
Village Grocery. I wish him great success with his new venture and
thank him again for his dedication to The Valley community. For hunters
and non-hunters alike, Troy's reporting station can serve as an
educational hub where information about hunting, big game and non-game
species biology and ecology, wildlife habitat and hunter education can
be obtained.
Koitzsch lives in Fayston and is the owner of Alces Post & Beam, which built the weigh station.
Add comment