Make wise decisions in the woods this year
Southeast Ohio is facing the largest outbreak in the region’s confirmed cases of epizootic hemorrhagic disease in deer. An Ohio Division of Wildlife deer biologist told The Columbus Dispatch this year’s outbreak is the largest he has seen in his career, and that hundreds of dead or sick deer have been reported in Athens, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble and Washington counties.
Mid-Ohio Valley counties in West Virginia have been affected, too.
That will mean deer hunters will have to think a little differently about their trips. Pre-season scouts in West Virginia have reported seeing what would normally be trophy specimens are instead already lying dead on the properties they have walked.
“We’ve got lots of mortality and so this fall will probably look quite a bit different for some of those folks in the most heavily, hardest hit areas,” Ohio Division of Wildlife deer biologist Clint McCoy told the Dispatch.
So, there will be fewer deer to hunt, and a suggested change in strategy, as McCoy says hunters may actually have to help support the population’s rebound.
McCoy asked hunters to avoid killing deer without antlers, as those males with antlers “don’t really matter” when it comes to manipulating the population.
Be patient and responsible, then, when hunting season makes its way to our region this year. Enjoy your time in the woods, but make decisions that will help ensure you will be able to do the same next year, too.