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New Article on CWD by Dr. Alan Houston, Ames Plantation
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<blockquote data-quote="BigAl" data-source="post: 5795211" data-attributes="member: 959"><p>IMO the spread has happened, they didn't slow it down (or did they?) so its time to just let nature takes its course. </p><p></p><p>I do believe that TWRA is damned if they do and damned if they don't. They tried to slow (not stop, impossible) the spread and people complained about it. Had they done nothing and it spread (it was going to do so regardless of TWRA actions), people would have complained about it and blamed TWRA.</p><p></p><p>I'm not far from Ames (both where I live and where I hunt) and I've seen the effects of CWD. And both places didn't have the extensive doe kills that Ames employed. Ames just picked the wrong time to kill too many does. Without CWD it was probably a good management practice. But they were doing it when CWD was doing its damage, so it was a double whammy. They just didn't know it. Just my 2 cents.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BigAl, post: 5795211, member: 959"] IMO the spread has happened, they didn't slow it down (or did they?) so its time to just let nature takes its course. I do believe that TWRA is damned if they do and damned if they don't. They tried to slow (not stop, impossible) the spread and people complained about it. Had they done nothing and it spread (it was going to do so regardless of TWRA actions), people would have complained about it and blamed TWRA. I'm not far from Ames (both where I live and where I hunt) and I've seen the effects of CWD. And both places didn't have the extensive doe kills that Ames employed. Ames just picked the wrong time to kill too many does. Without CWD it was probably a good management practice. But they were doing it when CWD was doing its damage, so it was a double whammy. They just didn't know it. Just my 2 cents. [/QUOTE]
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New Article on CWD by Dr. Alan Houston, Ames Plantation
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