Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/12/11
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Walt, The fact that the deer are changing the landscape is a real problem. Conservationists are very concerned about it. Because of a dearth of natural predators, deer numbers have exploded. Their natural food is the tender shoots of young plants and any succulent foliage they can reach. As the deer move through the woods, they eat all the young tree saplings and abort the growth sequence. Many local wood lands in the Northeast have only mature trees. And, of course, when they get into cultivated land, they eat anything that grows. We have lived in a wooded area in upState NY, near the Hudson River since 1965. A few decades ago we could grow almost anything. My wife, an avid gardener, was proud of her begonias. Wild rhododendrons were everywhere. When a lone deer was seen wandering along the side of the road, people would stop their cars and gaze in wonder. About 15 years ago it all changed. The deer population explosion in the Adirondack State Park forced the deer to expand their range south to the northern fringes of New York City. The Adirondack Park is huge, about three times the size of Yellowstone, so you can imagine how many deer there are. Much of New York State is wooded and agricultural so the deer had a ready pathway down to more populated areas. Deer prefer to live at the edge of the woods. They come out to graze, they dash back to the trees when they feel threatened. Unfortunately, that's where people like to live too. And the roads have become much more hazardous. Motorists don't have time to be annoyed by the road signs. Now they must drive with caution to avoid the herds of deer that regularly cross the highways. The only ones happy about the situation are the auto body shops. Everyone I know has hit a deer at least once. As far as eating goes, my wife has given up gardening. She is thinking about getting the lawn paved in concrete. Her "garden" is a nice collection of rounded stones. The wild rhododendrons have been eaten up as far as the deer can reach and now resemble green umbrellas. The deer even ate the plastic flowers my wife put out for some color. The only flowers the deer won't eat are daffodils, but they only bloom for a short while in the early spring. I'll post a few pictures of our "pets" as soon as I can figure out how to work the new LUG site. They certainly don't compare to Kyle's shots but I was much more emotional when I clicked the camera. I was torn between taking a picture and heaving a rock. Larry Z