Southeast idaho winterkill

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Three100mag

Guest
Just wanted to give you all a heads-up here in montpelier we have been hammered by snow storms. And this is no lie...45inch'son the level here in the valley!!!!!!!!!! we will have a tremendous winterkill simply because the deer cannot move!Sad but true, i hope the fish and game shut the season down for a few years. sorry for the bad news
 
Brian and all,

The rest of Wyoming is in pretty good shape. I just checked the snowpack in all of the basins. The Bear River - near Evanston (and Montpielier)and in the corner of southwest Wyoming is 150% of normal. Only three other basins are above normal for snowpack. The upper North Platte and the lower North Platte (Saratoga to Casper) are 119% and 109% and the Wind River (Lander/Riverton) is 118%. The Snake, which includes the Hoback and Greys is only 89% of normal.

You can look at all the data yourself at this link:

http://www-wwrc.uwyo.edu/nrcs/nrcs.html

We've had a little winter in the southeast, but it's nothing like 92-93 or some of the early 80's winters. The critters around here are all doing well.

Jim
 
Three100mag
I live in Cache Valley and we had 46 inches since Saturday and 70 inches on the upper benches. I got a call last night that the Division of Wildlife Resources is responding. They ordered tewentythree thousand tons of pellets and are flying Cache and Rich counties today to determine feed sites. I was up looking at deer last night and they can hardly move thru the snow. You could barely see the heads of the fawns. The deer are all moving into town now and we will have to deal with auto accidents and dogs. The deer herd here has been way below objectives and this snow may wipe them out. Bad news for all sportsman everwhere. Good luck and hope someone helps the deer in your neck of the woods.

buckmstr
 
I'd agree with Three100mag that it doesn't look good for the Montpelier area. At this point it could easily not be as bad as the winter of 92/93 because the deer went into the winter with some fat, we haven't seen extremely cold temps for extended periods of time and the snow could always melt early. On the other hand if it keeps snowing and it gets cold we are going to see a lot of winterkill. The area North of Soda as well as the area West of Preston hasn't seen unusaul amounts of snow so I think the winterkill is going to be isolated. Lets just hope this February and March have above average temps so the snow melts early on the winter range and we keep getting more snow in the mountains where we need it.

Three100mag,
Do the F&G plan on feeding the deer in the Montpelier area this winter or are they just going to buy themselves new trucks again lol??
 
D13er,

That's a lot of feed. I checked the e-mail again (which came form the BIG man himself at the SFW) and it is 23 tons. That sounds more realistic. Thanks for making me look again. I got a another e-mail that the DWR wants all volunters to meet with them tomorrow. They are going to set up feed sites thru out Cache and Rich counties. Hope we can make a difference. Thanks again.

buckmstr
 
Here's some info that the F&G had on their website that I thought some of you might find interesting.

idaho deer and elk weather the storm


Fish and Game workers and volunteers are feeding several hundred deer and elk after a winter storm hit Southern Idaho in early January.
The storm, which caused major flooding in California, just clipped Idaho, brought enough snow to raise concern about Idaho's most hunted big game animals. The herd hit hardest is in Bear Lake County, near Montpelier, where the ground is covered with as much as 42 inches of snow. About 100 deer there are receiving pellet rations formulated specifically to feed mule deer. Workers are also providing emergency rations to elk in Swan Valley. However, State Wildlife Manager Brad Compton says deer and elk in the region have more going for them this year than in years past.

"Most of them are going into the winter in well above average condition." said Compton.

He attributes the strong physical condition of the herds to an abundance of natural forage resulting from generous summer rains. Because they had plenty to eat through late summer, deer and elk have good stores of fat, the source of energy that keeps them alive when food is scarce in winter. While a certain amount of winter mortality is inevitable in areas hard hit by snow, biologist say the emergency feeding will provide the boost that will allow some animals to survive.

Fish and Game is also feeding elk in the Wood River Valley, but not for the same reasons. Magic Valley Regional Supervisor Dave Parrish says workers there are feeding elk to discourage them from migrating into areas populated by humans.
 
Thanks for the update guys. I was Idaho last weekend and the snow wasnt too bad north of Malad/Lava/Soda Springs areas, certainly not as deep as the Montpelier/Bear Lake area (I measured 43 inches near Emigration Cyn). This storm seems to have just set over the Bear Lake/Cache Valleys and dumped for about three days straight. Hopefully the feeding will help.

Any reports of snow in the Cokeville/Kemmerer areas??
 
I live in Downey, we didn't get anywhere near that much snow, we had 16 inches at the most, and with the warm weather what we have is going fast. There are about 80 head near my corrals and they all look to be in great shape. They didn't have to move to the winter grounds this year until about 2 weeks ago, so I don't think we will have near the problem with winter kill as the areas closer to wyoming.
 
We have ZERO snow. Unbelievable. What snow pack we had (none) has now been rained away. A deer could be at 10,000 feet and be happy. We are going to be in serious crap this summer and fall, but good news for the lack of winterkill. There just won't be any browse for them next winter.
 

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