Not sure how this will all turn out, but pronghorn in this area are not wintering very well. Some lopes are starting to move to the edge of town and yesterday part of a herd got whacked on the highway just north of town.
I was down south last week and found this doe that was recently killed by a yote or two.
They do a better job of getting meat off the carcass than I do.
The last couple years I have been mapping fences and trying to get them up to standards for wildlife passage. Though this fence was probably fine most of the year, but drifting this year has complicated things.
Not a good way to go.
This was not a big herd, about 40 if I remember correctly, and they were trapped between two fences along a county road. I stayed back as far as possible to not stress them, but enough to keep them moving to a crossing. After 1/2 mile they finally found a crossing. I blew it on the picture, there were probably 5 that jumped the fence before I got the camera turned on.
Once they got through they followed the path of least resistance. Note the hair at the fence as well.
I spoke with the local FWP biologist at a meeting the other day, sounds like about 50 more mortalities on the train tracks in the vicinity.
Hopefully that gopher doesn't see his shadow next week.
I was down south last week and found this doe that was recently killed by a yote or two.
They do a better job of getting meat off the carcass than I do.
The last couple years I have been mapping fences and trying to get them up to standards for wildlife passage. Though this fence was probably fine most of the year, but drifting this year has complicated things.
Not a good way to go.
This was not a big herd, about 40 if I remember correctly, and they were trapped between two fences along a county road. I stayed back as far as possible to not stress them, but enough to keep them moving to a crossing. After 1/2 mile they finally found a crossing. I blew it on the picture, there were probably 5 that jumped the fence before I got the camera turned on.
Once they got through they followed the path of least resistance. Note the hair at the fence as well.
I spoke with the local FWP biologist at a meeting the other day, sounds like about 50 more mortalities on the train tracks in the vicinity.
Hopefully that gopher doesn't see his shadow next week.