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I would disagree with that, because of what we found over a period of months, this blue tongue was a long process in Cumberland county, so I say our deer were exposed to it from early hot summer up to late oct. b4 we had a hint of a frost.....
If I understood you correctly the bucks were only exposed during velvet, not what we saw, wasn't the disease transmitted by a type of a mite ??? and it took a heavy frost to kill the mite
You are right it is a small mite and it doesn't die until after a frost. The drought conditions and unseasonably warm temps are what made the ehd outbreak so bad last season.
I'm no wildlife biologist I'm just going by the information shown to me by the conservation officer that gave me the carcass tags. Three different skulls of bucks were found and you could definetly tell the difference at the bases of the antlers if the had been rubbing or not. Two were still in velvet and one was not.One grossed over 150 the other two were around 140.(two ten pointers and an eleven) No matter what the case is still ***** that all these mature bucks were killed because of the EHD outbreak. Hopefully it doesn't happen again.
Luckily we only found 1 dead one on our place last year but it also was a dandy 8 pointer...alot of people ive talked to this year have blamed EHD for not seeing alot of deer this year,i dont know if that was the case for our farm or not but we didnt see the usual amount of deer this year neither
