by sambar358 » Sat 17 Oct, 2015 11:09 am
Xplora......you make some good points once again. The declaration of deer as a "pest" is another one of those double-edged swords unfortunately as it then causes a situation where the hunting/shooting of them is totally unregulated like that of our other pest animals.....so no Game Licences, no calibre restrictions, no seasons, no rules etc.....open slather for anyone who wants to have a crack at one.....day or night. And this then creates it's own problems mainly related to enforcement.....preventing people from doing the wrong thing in regard to trespass, shooting off roads, spotlighting in populous places etc......and this will be one of the main impediments to deer ever being officially declared a pest species....but it could happen I agree. But the cure could-well be worse than the disease and this is a view currently shared by the Police and other government departments that will have to deal with the enforcement aspect of this should it happen.
At the moment in permitted areas of the Alpine National Park seasonal deer hunting is permitted as deer have the status of "game" & we are permitted to hunt deer only.....no pest species at all.....so no rabbits, foxes, wild dogs, goats, feral cats etc.....just deer. So if we have a reclassification of deer from "game" to "pest" then in theory we as der hunters will instantly loose access to the Park to hunt as the deer are no longer classed as "game". But as you've mentioned......legislative change would be required to continue to allow hunting of deer in the Park should their status be changed.....and certainly that would need to be absolutely guaranteed before the hunting organisations would support such a change if indeed they would at all. I think the deer hunting organisations have a realistic view of the current deer scene and acknowledge that despite pretty signficant hunting pressure deer numbers continue to build rapidly in most areas and where their numbers are too high they have the potential to impact to a significant degree on various types of habitat. And I think that the current co-operative approach that Parks has taken with the deer hunting organisations is a very positive sign for the future and its encouraging to see hunters and Parks working together in localised areas to address specific deer issues and over time this should have a positive result in lessening the "them and us" attitude that has for too long prevailed between many Parks staff and deer hunters. Maybe in the longer term we'll see some re-assessment of the current access arrangements for recreational deer hunting in some of the areas currently close to hunting as I certainly see the deer numbers continuing to build strongly well into the future.....eradication will never be achieved, control even is probably unrealistic across-the-board but it may be possible to slow things down a bit here and there but anything above that will be very difficult to achieve I think.....like it or not......the deer are here to stay !
You make a very valid point about the ready availability of deer giving rise to a crop of opportunistic bogan hunters who have little regard for the law, land status or indeed the deer unfortunately. This is the downside of the current popularity of deer hunting.....and of course these types are a building problem for those resposible for enforcement who have to deal with floods of incident reports each year regarding spotlighting, trespass, illegal hunting and other associated issues related to the dark side of deer hunting. I often think that it would be great to return to the earlier times of sambar hunting when the deer were fewer and very hard to find.....while they are still a very switched-on animal and no push-over for the lone hunter on foot in the mountains their sheer numbers in many areas certainly give you a better chance of having a contact or two each day. And back when the sambar numbers were low and they were very hard to find only the keen hunters stuck at it......those that weren't fully committed for the long-haul soon dropped away and left the scene and back then we certanly didn't have the compliance issues that are common today.
Finally.....on "baiting"....or laying-out some food to attract deer to an area where they can be shot. Certainly it works in the US with their Whitetail deer and doing this is quite common and legal too in most states I think. In Vic it is illegal for hunters to bait deer on public land for the purpose of hunting......and this includes laying-out various favoured food items, planting a small crop in a bush clearing and putting-out various mineral lick blocks etc......so not legal for a hunter to do that for the purpose of hunting in Vic. Generally before a 1080 baiting program is carried-out the animals in the area to be baited are free-fed for some time with a similar food source to what will be later laced with poison and this is successfully done with rabbits in particular and is normal practice for baiting pest herbivore animals. I think that it'd be difficult to successfully lay bait stations to shoot good numbers of sambar deer over....but it'd be worth experimenting with just the same......and most certainly sambar are very keen on apples and potatoes in particular and a truck-load of either dumped in a clearing somewhere in country with plenty of deer about would get a few visits I would think....but with sambar being sambar they'd probably do that at night.....so some gen 3 NV equipment might be needed as well. But for me to do that I'd be risking getting into some serious strife......not so for Parks of course !
Sambar deer are an opportunistic feeder and one of the reasons that they have done so well across a wide variety of habitat types is that they'll eat virtually any plant species in any sort of environment from the dry coastal banksia country to the open snowgum country of our highest mountains. They are primarily a browser preferring to randomly pick at the foliage of shrubs and bushes as they move-about rather than heavily graze on grass like the fallow deer tend to do and for sambar anything really that is a plant is a possible food source and they will fourish virtually anywhere. A while ago I watched a couple of sambar hinds selectively feeding on the leaves from some young snowgum suckers choosing to ignore the abundant clover and other lush grasses underfoot.....often I've noted gum leaves present in the paunches of sambar deer that I have shot......so they're never going to go hungry even in severe drought years in our mountains as there'll always be plenty of gums to browse on. Off this arvo for a week with a mate from SA over on his annual sambar trip with me......and we're heading up to the usual haunt over near your patch......maybe we'll catch-up one day and be able to have a chat ! Cheers
s358