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Time is Right for Agriculture to Take on Deer

Great to see. That is my local paper that I have been contacting with no reply. Glad the ACA could get the job done.
 
Its great to see this as you have the QDMRs all posting their single sided information.  Here is a bit of info for everyone, Since 1970 there have only been 1090 documented deaths in free range deer related to CWD and in that same time frame  3.5 million deer dead because of EHD here in the US. Also Kudos to the ACA.
 
Brad,  Allen Morris is pushing his NOMOCWD, crap again in the comment section.  That site is loaded with so many lies by him and Steve Jones.


 


Gary Olson
 
This ***** posted this on Dr. Davis's article.  This lady testified at the MDC Commission meeting.  Look how clueless she is.


Gary Olson


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Kathy Etling 12px;808080;' ', 'lucida grande', tahoma, verdana,  ·  Top Commenter
12px;808080;' ', 'lucida grande', tahoma, verdana,
(26,26,26);margin:0px 28px 5px 0pxCWD is usually the product of an infected deer or elk which is hauled, either illegally or legally, to someplace else. The few instances where CWD has cropped up in areas with no game farms within 100 miles, you can just bet that one of these two things happened: 1.) a deer farmer whose deer became sick was too attached to the animals to euthanize them and so drove somewhere else and released them, making them the public's problem; OR 2.) an illegal hauler of deer had a wreck or was fearful of getting caught and so released his illegal cargo. A third scenario is also possible, however: a hunter might have brought a CWD-infected head, including brain and/or spinal cord, and improperly disposed of it, which would have allowed wild deer to become infected.


If CWD had ALWAYS been in the wild the myriad journals, notes, and letters left behind by mountain men, explorers, early naturalists, homesteaders, wagon train participants, cavalrymen, cowboys, ranchers, etc. would surely have had something to say about a 'wasting sickness.' But no one did, so CWD is a recent phenomenon that has become a plague upon the landscape in good part thanks to the shipping of infected deer and elk all over the place, sometimes illegally. 


And the 5-year certification is no longer good enough; CWD, in some cases, has appeared -- apparently after being dormant -- more than 5 years later.


The only answer is NO MORE IMPORTATION OF DEER or ELK by captive game farmers.



 
 
I have heard a lot of half truths about CWD but this is totally absurd. I can't believe anyone can even legally say  **** like that with out any proof at all. I give her one thing it is the best fictional story I have ever heard. I hate to say it but I meet this lady once. She used to own some land next to my dad years ago. She wrote outdoor articles back then don't know what she does now. My dad read one of her articles back then on rabbit hunting. We rabbit hunted all or life so we know how its done whats used etc. The next time my dad seen her he asked her if she ever went rabbit hunting ever in her life. He said the story was written like the person had no clue how rabbit hunting was done.  I guess shes still writing about **** shes knows nothing about still. Its sad that the conservation even let her testify at the meeting because if anyone there had even had half a brain would know that that statement is just absurd and it just makes the conservation look like idiots letting her testify
 
 

This was on the MDC website.  Is this her?

margin:0pxKathy Etling
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St. Louis freelance writer Kathy Etling often writes for the Conservationist. She and her husband own property in Ste. Genevieve, where they go



 
 
GeorgiaInteresting she has hunted in Africa.  these means she HAS hunted in a preserve.
GeorgiaGary
Georgia________________________________________________________
Georgia 
GeorgiaJune 25, 2007
28px;GeorgiaGuest Blogger: Kathy Etling On Why Women Hunt
Georgia; by Kim Hiss
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GeorgiaWe’ve been a little gear heavy for the past few posts, so now for something different, we have an entry from a guest blogger—outdoors writer Kathy Etling. She’s written a stack of books and magazine articles (see her bio below), and is a passionate outdoorswomen. Here are her thoughts on being a huntress… KH
GeorgiaWhen I started hunting I’d attract a milling, somewhat amazed check-station crowd whenever I brought in a white-tailed deer or wild turkey I’d bagged myself. By the time the Missouri check station tradition ended a couple of years ago, it was common for my daughter, who’s also a hunter, and I to meet other successful female hunters frequenting the same check stations. What has been so gratifying is knowing – and seeing – the results of what would become a personal lifelong mission to spread the good word about hunting to other women while also doing my best to convince men that yes, women belonged beside them in the field.
GeorgiaThose hunting genes that helped our ancestors survive, during that past 2 million years, weren’t selectively handed down only to men. Women also received those genes, and sometimes more than a mere dollop of them along with patience, fortitude, cunning and endurance. Readers who have borne or raised children will recognize the latter qualities as essential to being a good mother, one with effective parenting skills. Add those qualities to our hunting genes and females become a force with which to be reckoned when they take to the hunting woods.
GeorgiaHunting and bowhunting rely not so much on brute strength as on stealthiness, intellect, perseverance, woodsmanship and sheer physical endurance. A game animal is gender neutral. Whether hunted by man or woman it will use the exact same tactics in an attempt to escape.
GeorgiaHunting is a great equalizer. The sport is fun, healthy and relaxing. Healthy because a hunter must engage in physical activity to hunt, an activity one can make as strenuous and arduous as she wants. Healthy because a successful hunter harvests her own sustenance -- wild meat that not only contains little saturated fat, but is devoid of the antibiotics, steroids and hormones that lurk is so many of today’s domestic meat products. Fun because when you’re hunting your mind is released to experience nature as few other people ever will. Relaxing because hunting is often a solitary pursuit, one which generally takes place far from the madding crowd.
GeorgiaWomen have recently flocked to hunting in droves for another reason, too: they have learned that it’s a great way to forge strong bonds with the man in their lives, their children, family and hunting sisters.

I now have a granddaughter. My fondest hope is to someday take to the woods with both her and her mother where together I foresee enjoying outings as memorable as those I enjoyed with my daughter when she began hunting with me as a child.
GeorgiaI know already that when my life is over my last thoughts will be happy ones of the many days spent afield with my family and the tired yet contented feeling of coming together to share our tales of the hunt in our cabin or in a tent pitched near timberline.
GeorgiaI can only hope that those now reading these words have found – or soon will find the same joy and fulfillment in hunting as I have. If so, your life will have been good, indeed!
Georgia; Here’s Kathy’s bio and a link to some of her books…
GeorgiaKathy Etling has been writing about the outdoors since 1982. She's been on Buckmasters magazine’s masthead since its inception, has been the Field Gear Editor for Petersen's Bowhunting magazine for over 15 years, and was Outdoor Life's Missouri Editor for ten years. Kathy has written numerous features for the NRA's American Hunter, Petersen's Hunting, and Sports Afield. Her books include Hunting Superbucks: How to Find and Hunt Today's Trophy Mule and Whitetail Deer, The Quotable Cowboy, and Cougar Attacks. She collaborated with Montana’s Susan Campbell Reneau to write The Thrill of the Chase: Women and Their North American Big Game Trophies. Kathy’s most recent book is Bowhunting’s Superbucks. Scheduled to be published this fall is Kathy’s biography of Denise Parker, the youngest American woman to win an Olympic medal in archery.
GeorgiaKathy has won numerous national awards for her writing, including the William Vogt Award for environmental conservation from the Izaak Walton League, and the Apogee Award from the Western Outdoor Writers.
GeorgiaKathy has hunted elk, bighorn sheep, whitetails, mule deer, antelope, wild turkey, and upland game all over North America. She’s also taken blesbok, greater kudu, and a record book impala in Africa.
 
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When we have hearings in our capital the committee chair will not let someone like Kathy Etling talk about CWD. Repeatedly, I have heard them cut people's testimony off who are not experts if they try talk about CWD.
 
I wonder if this lady supported the Elk that was brought into Missouri from I think Kentucky and released to reintroduced Elk into Missouri.
 
We should find out if this lady really did go to Africa hunting and make sure we post on her social media along with every other place that she hunts on high fence preserves.  99% of people do not realize that most African hunts are on preserves from animals that are raised and released just like ours.  These type people will turn and run when exposed and jeopardized.
 
Roger your a Facebook stalker hahahaha!!! People didn't talk about CWD back in the day because they were too busy trying to survive...
 
Here is some info, Joe Hamilton Of the QDMA just went on a preserve hunt in Africa with his family.   Chris Asplundh of Asplundh tree services is a board member of qdma and has a deer farm in PA and also a high fence preserve he has invited qdma members to hunt in.
 
RyanM84944751405272451

Roger your a Facebook stalker hahahaha!!! People didn't talk about CWD back in the day because they were too busy trying to survive...


Just thought someone might like to leave her a note. I did ;)
 
I'm sure she does support the elk reintroduction, she and all the cry baby Wildlife Federation members will have a chance at free hunt minus the cost of the license. Thousands of people including almost all of the SD Wildlife Federation members apply every year for one bull elk tag in Custer state park, it's completely high fenced, it borders wind cave national park which has one of the highest concentrations of CWD positive animals in the country. It's alright for them to hunt there because it's free minus the tag cost, they can say they did it on their own. Nothing like hunting a bull that's been hand fed marsh mellows and pop corn balls all summer by over a million visitors each summer.
 
The cwd bs aside, I was happier here in Ohio with the DNR in charge.


 


They would stop once a yr., talk a little and leave, some years I didn't see them.


 


With the Dept. of Ag., and their required tagging, my vet bills have doubled.


 


I'm just a small time farmer, 12 to 20 deer, selling a shooter or two every year to break even.


 


An extra $1,000 in vet bills, plus days off work, puts me in the red. They also want to put the entire herd down every three years to check their tags.....WTH.....another $1,200 and stress on the deer, for what?
 

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