Eastern MT Winterkill

NeMont

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Here is todays article in the Billings Gazette. There has also been a number of antelope winter killed and more are likely to die. It is grim all over eastern Montana.

Nemont

January 29, 2004
Montana outdoors: Stage set for deer deaths
By MARK HENCKEL
Of The Gazette Staff

So the waiting game begins for the deer of Eastern Montana. How many will live? How many will die? The remaining months of winter will decide.

Deer numbers were very high across almost all of Eastern Montana last fall. Hunters harvested lots of them. But plenty remained to enter this winter.

Now those deer are facing what many call a good, old-fashioned Montana winter - deep snow in some places, strong prairie winds and periodic dips into subzero temperatures.


Winter is the big reaper for deer of the open spaces of Eastern Montana, especially when it comes on the heels of a drought summer when food sources dried up and fat reserves on the animals was poor.

At this time of year, deer always have to dip into their fat reserves to burn up calories and supplement what they're eating. But in years like this one, those fat reserves are even more critical.

Worst in northeast

The worst of winter in Montana is hitting the northeastern counties and that's been chronicled here before. They've had deep snow in that area since the last days of October.

Giant flocks of pheasants there are being fed thousands of pounds of grain screenings at two cents a pound by landowners to keep them alive. Deer are moving to the edges of town and sometimes even into town. Snow is more than 2 feet deep on the level and much higher in drifts.

But deer are suffering hardships elsewhere, too, across Eastern Montana.

"It's worrisome," said John Ensign, wildlife manager for Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks at Miles City. "We're not dealing with the really severe stuff they're dealing with in northeastern and parts of northcentral Montana. But we have our spots.

"The Jordan area figured they had 2 feet of snow on the level. As you get down toward Wyoming, they don't have too much at all," he said.

"At least we've had some breaks in the weather. It warmed up in early January. Now we're back in the deep freeze," Ensign said. "We haven't seen any mortality yet. If this weather continues, I'm sure it will happen."

Dry summer hurt

Last summer's drought is only complicating things for deer as they face this winter.

Eastern Montana had good spring rains last year, but the rain clouds vanished in July, August and September. Quality food became more scarce.

As a result, some deer were very lean by the time hunters took them last fall. They didn't have much stored fat for the winter. That's working against them now, too.

The deer most vulnerable to winter mortality are the fawns and mature bucks. Fawns put most of their calories into growth and generally don't store as much fat. Bucks burn off their fat during the November breeding season, then don't have much time to put any back on before winter closes in.

Does who carried, gave birth to and then nursed twin fawns last year are also at risk. Keeping two fawns going until they're big enough to feed on their own puts a strain on does and diminishes their fat reserves.

The amount of winter kill that occurs in Eastern Montana will unfold in the coming months. As they say, the stage is set.

"When you do get mortality, it typically comes at the end of winter," Ensign said. "The deer make it through the toughest part of the winter, then at the end, they're in such poor shape that they just can't make it through the last of it.

"Out here, that's usually March. You get those last big snows and they just can't seem to make it," he said. "By the end of March, we're usually out of the woods but you can get those big, heavy, wet snows in April sometimes, too, and that could tip them over."

With big deer numbers going into this winter, there is some room for moderate winter kill this year and the chance to have a good deer population survive. Fawn production this spring might be affected because does are in bad shape. Buck populations might look different, too, because the older bucks are so vulnerable. And there might not be many yearlings.

All that will play out in the next couple of months. It all depends on what type of winter finale Mother Nature plans for the deer of Eastern Montana.


Mark Henckel is the outdoor editor of The Billings Gazette. His columns appear Thursdays and Sundays. He can be contacted at 657-1395 or at [email protected].


Copyright ? The Billings Gazette, a division of Lee Enterprises.
 
That sucks... Pray for nice weather to melt some of that snow away, not like there is much for them to eat but at least they won't have to burn as many calories trying to get to it.

So the way I take it its everything pretty much north of the breaks including the breaks to the south right?
 
Ivan,
From what I have been told: From Chinook east to the Nodak line and Hwy 200 north to the Canadian line. is kind of the extreme winter area.
I drove from Glasgow to Helena last Thursday and there was no snow to speak of from Havre to almost Helena. The fields between Great Falls and Cascade are still open and filled with thousands of geese.
Over here the snow came early to just keeps piling up. Todays update for snow accumaltion in Glasgow is 23 inches of snow pack and since October a total of over 48 inches has fell, normal is 16.5, as of 11:00 a.m. MDT today with a prediction of another 5-7 inches in the next 24 hours. In addition we are extremely cold. -16 deg with a -33 deg wind chill. We are not expected to get to 0 degs until sometime late next week :-(

All wildlife is hurting. I have 50 sharptail living in my back yard eating the bird food my kids put out. I have gone through 50 lbs of cracked corn in about 14 days.

Nemont
 
I was hunting out of Winifred the first part of Nov. VERY VERY cold and about 6-12" of snow on the ground. Winter kill is always a bummer. The government should step up more and feed those animals during hard winters.

jeremy Oregon
 
Gezzz thats almost a quarter of the state. The moisture is needed but at what cost???

This weather is going to put a BIG dent in the bird populations, those phesants just cant handle that kind of snow and cold, neither can the shappies. Hope it breaks soon, Feburary usually brings some nice weather, hopefully it will warm up enough to melt that snow off anyway.

My parents said they have been getting a lot of snow there as well, I think they said the snow pack was 35% over normal or something. I know the Bridgers and the Big Belts have a ton of snow in them, so the Smith should have plenty of water in it this year for once...

I remember hunting horns the spring of 97 and all the dead deer and elk I found. I remember finding 17 deer and 5 elk in one trip. Three of those were bulls...

Come on spring
 
LAST EDITED ON Jan-29-04 AT 02:04PM (MST)[p]The silver lining in all of this, for us, is that we will replace some of the water in Ft. Peck lake. It is setting new record lows every day as the corps of engineers continues to draw down the resevoir for poeer generation. The last time we had a winter like this it added nearly 20 feet to the level of the lake.
Nemont
 
nemont,

thanks for the update. there is still time for the snow to melt and not have too many deer die, so i'll cross my fingers. are the snow conditions up there as bad as the winter of 95-96? that winter killed alot of deer, especially the mature bucks...

like you said, whether or not the snow melts now or later, alot of the meltwater will end up in the reservoir so it's a blessing.

around here we're having a winter that is more normal than the last 4-5 years.

later,
berto
 
Berto,
That year, if I recall correctly, we had just at 53 inches of snow. If we get the predicted 5-7 inches in the next 24 hours we will be right at that amount. With Febraury and March looming out there. It could warm up alot between now and then but there are already some deer winter kills taking place around Lewistown, Stanford, Grass Range and Roy because of the poor condition the deer were in when winter began.

Bambistew,
The birds are suffering the feed grounds are covered with pheasant, sharpies, huns and even ducks that are trying to make a living. Doesn't bode well for the bird hunting next year.

Nemont
 
I know I cringed when I saw the weather report tonight. The guy here predicted 16 inches in the "plains" tonight and early tommorrow with ANOTHER 1-2 feet tommorrow night into Saturday. Lets hope this forecaster was way off and your 5-7inch report is more accurrate.

We'd all rather hunt the bucks, but if the winter kicks their asses we'll have to run around all spring and pick up racks.
 
January 30, 2004

Last modified January 29, 2004 - 11:48 pm



Winter hits hard in north and east
By LORNA THACKERAY
Of The Gazette Staff

Every time an emergency call comes into the Valley County Sheriff's Office in Glasgow, a snowplow goes out ahead of the ambulance.

"They keep plowing the roads, and they plug right up again,'' a clearly weary Sheriff Glen Meier said Thursday afternoon.

"I tell you what,'' he said. "I've lived here 25 years, and this is the worst I've seen it. It just won't stop blowing and drifting. We're pretty much sure that hell froze over this morning.''


On Wednesday morning, it took four hours for snowplows to dig out the road to a rural Hinsdale-area residence where were two people died, apparently of carbon monoxide poisoning. All indications are that the carbon monoxide got into the house from two generators on the porch that were apparently being used to help heat the house. The house was the most remote in the county, he said

Whole Story http://www.billingsgazette.com/index.php?id=1&display=rednews/2004/01/30/build/state/32-brrrrrr.inc
 

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