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CWD Article
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<blockquote data-quote="Strict" data-source="post: 4753478" data-attributes="member: 16428"><p><strong>Why, for instance, did Hoseck's entire herd test positive for CWD all at once? "I've asked myself that a lot," he says. "The only thing I can figure is that I had a feral cat that got really familiar with my deer. The deer would lick it like it was their fawn, and that cat would use the deer feed troughs like a litterbox. I take in a lot of deer for skull mounts in my taxidermy business, and some of those heads come in from across the river, in Wisconsin. After I boil the heads, I'll blow out the brains with a pressure washer. Sometimes the cat would eat those brains, and I'd guess if it ate infected brains and then crapped in the feed and my deer ate it, they could get infected too."</strong></p><p></p><p>Cat's fault!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Strict, post: 4753478, member: 16428"] [b]Why, for instance, did Hoseck’s entire herd test positive for CWD all at once? “I’ve asked myself that a lot,” he says. “The only thing I can figure is that I had a feral cat that got really familiar with my deer. The deer would lick it like it was their fawn, and that cat would use the deer feed troughs like a litterbox. I take in a lot of deer for skull mounts in my taxidermy business, and some of those heads come in from across the river, in Wisconsin. After I boil the heads, I’ll blow out the brains with a pressure washer. Sometimes the cat would eat those brains, and I’d guess if it ate infected brains and then crapped in the feed and my deer ate it, they could get infected too.”[/b] Cat's fault! [/QUOTE]
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