California Wild Sheep Foundation
Transcription
California Wild Sheep Foundation
California Wild Sheep Fall 2010 IN THIS ISSUE From the Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 President’s Message . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 25 Years of “Modern” California Sheep Hunting to be Celebrated at 2011 Fundraiser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Golden Boy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Photos from the Field . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Ballot on Possible Name Change . . . 11 Water in the Desert Benefits Wildlife . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Director Election Results . . . . . . . . . . 12 CA FNAWS Regional Dinners . . . . . . 13 Digiscoping Tips from Swarovski . . . 14 Green Gun, Blue Bullets, Bighorn Sheep . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Recovery of Sierra Bighorn . . . . . . . . 19 WSF Chapter & Affiliates Meeting . . 20 Two Tags in Two Years? Impossible! 23 Mountain Sheep, Mule Deer, and Donkeys in the Desert . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Coyote Ridge is Occupied . . . . . . . . . 28 Trail Cam Photos . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Recent Literature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Photo from Trail Cam Bristol Mountains – where we expect to get hunting tags within the next two years A Publication of the California Chapter of the Foundation for North American Wild Sheep C al-TIP Californians Turn in Poachers and Polluters 1 888 DFG-CALTIP(888 334-2258) Brian S. MacDonald Vice President Financial Advisor Richard D. MacDonald Vice President Financial Advisor Kristin Villasper Client Associate A Confidential Secret Witness Program CalTIP (Californians Turn In Poachers and Polluters) is a confidential secret witness program that encourages the public to provide Fish and Game with factual information leading to the arrest of poachers and polluters. 101 California St., Suite 2575 San Francisco, California 94111-5898 415 274 6054 Direct 800 450 8655 Toll Free FAX 415 644 5511 brian_s_macdonald@ml.com W estern W ildlife Taxiderm y Aaron Armstrong www.western-wildlife.com aaronhunts@gmail.com Roseville, CA CalTIP was introduced in California in 1981 in order to give Californians an opportunity to help protect the state's fish and wildlife resources. The toll free telephone number operates 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. You do not have to give your name. A laska Trophy H unts Tom Shankster www.aktrophyhunts.com akhunts148@aol.com For more information go to http://www.dfg.ca.gov/enforcement/caltip.aspx. CA FNAWS Global Wealth Management 2 Fall 2010 From the Editor’s Desk I hope you’ve already been hunting this season, or at least soon will be! My season has started and I look forward to the next hunt, which I will be on when you receive this newsletter. I’ve talked with several of the lucky Desert Bighorn tag in CA persons – we will have multiple stories from them in the next two issues. I hope you enjoy this one, there is much to see. I’d like to particularly draw your attention to: • Some fun stuff – e.g. Photos from the Field, Cadomin Alberta pictures, Argali Hunters Lament • First installment of “anticipation” for our April 30 Banquet and Fundraiser, and the WSF Convention in Reno February 10-12 • Ballot on name change • Regional Dinners/Get Togethers • Special inspirational message from President Ken Fish • Digiscoping How To • Donkeys in the Desert • Wild Sheep Win Historic Victory - Payette Forest Decision • Several great hunt stories • And, as usual, much, much more. I am always looking for new material of interest to members. Email, call or write! Input due date for the 4Q10 issue is November 30. Mike J. Borel CA FNAWS Newsletter Editor 925-937-4180; mike.borel@contextnet.com An Argali Hunter’s Lament Request for Hunt Pictures for the website (sheep and goats) and the scrolling presentation during the fundraiser (any species) When I was young I read Jack O’Connor, Who spoke of sheep hunting as quite an honor. Towering ridges and canyons deep. Dramatic settings for trophy sheep! But alas, little did I suspect or know About the related financial undertow! Deposits and payments that never end, The endless checks that we must send! While I hope you do not think of me any less, I did not intend to single-handedly redress Some mid-Asian government’s financial mess! It is undeniably an honor to hunt the proud Argali, But financially, it’s like ten rounds with Muhammed Ali! We want and need your “in field” photos that can be displayed in the Member Trophies Section of our website, www.cafnaws.org, and also used in the presentation we will scroll for all to enjoy prior to dinner at our April 30, 2011 Fundraiser in Rancho Cordova. Please send them as a jpg or tif file attached to an email (I can receive up to 10 mg at a time) to mike.borel@contextnet.com. We will use your pictures with a Sheep or Goat for the website and the scrolling presentation. We will also use your pictures with any species taken in the last few years for the scrolling presentation. Fall 2010 (By a certain sheep hunter, CA FNAWS Life Member and SCI Life Member in The Bay Area) 3 CA FNAWS Events Board of Directors 2010 Officers Sept. 11 CA FNAWS Regional Get Together in LA at Chart House Restaurant in Redondo Beach/King Harbor; organized by Mike Borel Sept. 12 CA FNAWS Regional Get Together in SF (East Bay) at Zio Fraedo’s, 611 Gregory, Pleasant Hill; organized by Mike Borel Oct. 16 CA FNAWS Regional Get Together in San Diego at Crab Catcher in La Jolla; organized by Ken Fish Oct. 22 Sheep Summit VIII at Bass Pro Shops in Ranch Cucamonga (near Ontario Airport) Oct. 23 Hunter Clinic for Lucky Tag Recipients, Camp Cady Nov. 6 CA FNAWS Regional Get Together in Orange County at Ontario in Costa Mesa; organized by Ken Fish Nov. 6 CA FNAWS Regional Get Together in Dixon at Bud’s Pub & Grill; organized by Jason Hairston Nov. 6 CA FNAWS Regional Get Together in Visalia at Cafe 225, 225 West Main Street; organized by Tom Griffiths Nov. 6 CA FNAWS Regional Get Together in Eureka; organized by Paul Brisso Nov. 6 CA FNAWS Regional Get Together in Santa Barbara and Auburn; organizers sought Nov. 10 CA FNAWS Regional Get Together at 2596 Bay Road, Redwood City; organized by Dwight Ortmann Nov. 30 Due Date for 4Q2010 Newsletter to mike.borel@contextnet.com Dec. ?? CA FNAWS Regional Get Together in or near Williams; organized by Ben Gordon President Ken D. Fish (2012) Northern California Vice President Mike J. Borel (2012) Southern California Vice President Jim Fitzgerald (2011) Vice President, Operations Kyle Meintzer (2011) Secretary Paul A. Brisso (2011) Treasurer Steve Boitano (2012) Board of Directors John F. Cavin (2012) Roger L. McCosker (2012) John Drummond (2011) Brenton Scott (2012) Ben Gordon (2012) Tammy Scott (2012) Tom Griffiths (2011) Chris Settelmeyer (2011) Don C. Martin (2011) 2011 California Wild Sheep is published quarterly. Please e-mail all articles and photos to mike.borel@contextnet.com. Photos should be high resolution and in color. It is recommended that digital photos be sent by e-mail. Please include photo credits and captions. CA FNAWS 4 Jan. 20-23 ISE Show, Sacramento Feb. 10-12 WSF Convention, Reno Feb. 23-26 GSCO Convention, Las Vegas April 29 Sheep Summit IX, Sacramento April 30 Tour of DFG Lab (to be organized) April 30 CA FNAWS “Drive to 35” Fundraiser/ Banquet in Rancho Cordova at Marriott (note date change to Last Saturday in April) Fall 2010 President’s Letter Welcome to the August edition of the CA FNAWS newsletter. Included in this issue is a ballot on whether to retain our current name or to change it to the California Chapter of the Wild Sheep Foundation. Depending upon the outcome of the vote, this may be last issue of the CA FNAWS newsletter, which could henceforth be published as the California Wild Sheep Foundation newsletter. As we are all aware from recent elections, how (and whether) we vote matters; please take the time to cast your ballot concerning the name of our organization. Also, let that whet your appetite for the upcoming November mid-term elections, which may be our single best opportunity to bring change we can believe in to Washington. You will also find in this issue an invitation to our Fall regional dinners, the first of which will be held on September 11 and 12. I hope you will make the time to RSVP and then to gather with your fellow sheep hunters sometime this fall at one of our designated regional dinners. As an added incentive, we have a small gift for everyone who shows up at one of these events. Further to the topic of gatherings, there is also a report on the Chapter and Affiliates meeting that was held in Edmonton this summer, as well as an early peek at what is in store at the annual fundraiser, to be held on April 30, 2011. This newsletter also includes some very informative articles about the science behind wild sheep conservation and management, and as always, we have also included some exciting hunt stories. I particularly like the story about chukar hunting, which is the “poor man’s sheep hunt,” and happily one that can be done more than once each year. I am often struck by the fact that, issue by issue, both our wildlife management stories and our hunt stories are written by people who are leaders in the field of sheep biology and hunting. I hope you will make the time to enjoy this banquet of articles that are laid out for your reading pleasure. ******* As I write this, Fall has already come to the North Country where the leaves and the tundra are turning red and gold. I’ve already heard a few reports of and from members who have returned from their hunting trips. It gives one a sense of perspective, remembering that the mountains and the game they hold were there before any of us got here; and they will still be standing long after we are gone. This is the time of year when our thoughts turn to religious celebrations and to the weakening rays of the sun (in the northern hemisphere anyway), all of which reminds of our own mortality. Hunting is (or should be) invested with a sense of the mystical, and perhaps for some of us, of the religious. As hunters, we are active participants in the circle of life, and we are the carriers of something more ancient than civilization itself. The Greeks and the Romans recognized the importance of hunting, even as they built some of the most magnificent cities the world has ever seen. The Greek goddess Artemis, whom the Romans called Diana, was the guardian of the City of Ephesus during the 1st century. She was also revered as the goddess of the hunt, of wild animals, of wilderness (especially mountains and forests), and of virginity (chastity). She is normally depicted as a young woman, perhaps 13 to 19 years of age, with a bow and arrows. Cypress trees, oaks and deer were sacred to her. So, at least as far back as Greco-Roman times, hunters stood for a way of life that was in sharp contrast to the decadence and excesses of urban life. In addition, it seems indisputable that her age and her gender serve as reminders that we should all encourage youth and women to join our traditions. Hunting isn’t just for grown men! Reaching even further back in time to the 2nd millennium BC, the biblical book of Genesis mentions both Nimrod, who was “a mighty hunter before the Lord,” and later Esau the hunter, who as the eldest son of the patriarch Isaac had a place of special honor. Isaac was especially fond of the game meat that Esau frequently brought back to their encampment. Many centuries later in the Judeo-Christian tradition of the West, we encounter St. Hubertus, the first bishop of Liège and the Apostle of the Ardennes Forest. According to histories of the time, Hubertus was a skilled hunter who sought comfort and distraction on solitary hunts after his beloved wife, Princess Floribana, died during childbirth. While hunting one Good Friday, he encountered a large albino roe deer stag carrying a shining cross between its antlers (Although this sounds odd to our way of thinking, remember that the Roman Emperor Constantine and his soldiers had a similar vision of a cross in 312 just before the Battle of the Milvian Bridge. This vision led to Constantine’s conversion and to the subsequent Christianization of the Fall 2010 5 CA FNAWS Roman Empire. As with Constantine, St. Hubertus’ vision resulted in his own conversion.). St. Hubertus laid down his high office and distributed his wealth among the poor and to the church, preaching among the forest dwellers he had undoubtedly come to know while hunting in what is modern Belgium and France. Since the 7th century, St. Hubertus has been the patron saint of hunters and those who care for animals [Note that hunters and those who care for animals are considered together]. If food was scarce in the winter, St. Hubertus would go out to the forest to provide it for the animals, often accompanied by his loyal hunting dogs. In European religious tradition, rural inhabitants honor St. Hubertus by sharing their feasts of game meat with townspeople, holding charity fundraising festivals and taking responsibility for the care of the animals on their lands, both domestic and wild [animal husbandry, habitat improvement and conservation]. All of this sounds surprisingly modern if you think of the holiday wild game drives that hunting organizations around our state routinely hold each year, to say nothing of the habitat work that goes on as a result of our combined labors. Since the 7th century and to this day, whenever a buck is hunted in Northern Europe, hunters have placed a small branch of evergreen or of oak in the mouth of the fallen game. This is done as an offering of the Last Bite, signifying a final salute to the animal and symbolically giving back to God “the soul which I received from Him.” By honoring the forest’s creatures, St. Hubertus believed that he honored the Creator who made them. Those of you who have hunted in Europe are familiar with this tradition, as it reminds us that hunting is about much more than the kill. If we turn our thoughts to the East, we find that while vegetarianism is the ideal for the brahmin (priestly) caste in Hinduism, abstaining from meat is not a rigid law. In fact, Hindu thought in the Vedas allows the kshatriya (warrior) class to hunt for food. Moreover, the Hindu god Shiva was known to be a hunter, and there is at least one account of him rescuing a deer hunter that a tiger had chased up a bilva tree. Consequently, while many Hindus are vegetarians, meat eating in general and hunting in particular are not forbidden within the broader context of Hindu religious tradition. Furthermore, at least one Hindu holy man has written that hunting is more humane than raising animals in tight quarters, fattening them up and performing “mass killings” on them. In his view, the principle of compassion trumps that of efficiency, as he writes, “factory farming constitutes cruelty.” Share that with the next vegan you encounter on the streets of San Francisco or Hollywood! There’s no doubt about it: Fall is a magical, mystical, spiritual time of year. I hope this year you will not only have successful times afield, but that you will find yourself enriched and renewed as you participate in a drama and in rituals that are as old as time itself. For the sheep, Ken Fish President, CA FNAWS Iron W heel G uest Ranch John and Sherry Cargill www.ironwheel.com cargill@ironwheel.com Whitehall, MT C ordoba H unting SA Faco Pavcovich Los Andex 600 Villa Carlos PA3 Cordoba, Argentina info@cordobahunting.com 54.9351.373.0004 Tim berline O utfitters Perry Hunsaker www.timberlineoutfitters.com timber@timberlineoutfitters.com Higley, AZ H unt Trip Spain Francisco Rosich www.hunttripspain.com joelle@hunttripspain.com Barcelona, Spain U SA Shooting Team Buddy DuVall www.usashooting.org Colorado Springs, CO Zulu N yala G roup Veena Joory www.zulunyala.com Holland, MI CA FNAWS 6 Fall 2010 25 YEARS OF “MODERN” CALIFORNIA SHEEP HUNTING TO BE CELEBRATED AT 2011 FUNDRAISER by Paul Brisso Twenty-five years of the “modern era” of California sheep hunting, the 50th Anniversary of the California Society for the Conservation of Bighorn Sheep, and CA FNAWS’s continuing “Drive to 35” sheep tags will be celebrated at the next annual fundraiser on Saturday evening, April 30, 2011. The event returns to the Marriott at Rancho Cordova in the Sacramento area for the second year. The venue for the 2010 event drew positive reviews on the quality of the dinner, banquet hall and accommodations. The 2011 Hunt Donation Subcommittee, headed by Adam Casagrande, already has many key hunts and trips committed, including hunts in North America, Africa and Europe, and trips that include a popular Idaho whitewater rafting adventure. Although not yet formally committed, we expect to once again have desert bighorn auction tags for California and Mexico. Spirited bidding and a roaring crowd pushed the California tag to $60,000 and the Tiburon Island tag to $100,000 at the 2010 auction. Plans are being made to have a “work in progress” auction list up on the chapter website in the near future. Check the website for the upcoming auction list, and then check back for updated information on hunts and other auction items to plan your auction purchases. The list will have outfitter information so you can “do your homework” prior to the event. Fall 2010 The 2011 Fundraiser Committee has plans in the works for more taxidermy displays and exhibits for the 2011 event. Save the date (April 30, 2011) and plan to attend! Watch the website and e-mails for future information and reservation details. Here is a brief “teaser list” of items for auction: Sheep & G oat • Desert Bighorn Hunt – Tiburon, Mexico (WSF) • Desert Bighorn Tag – California (CA DFG) • Aoudad-Texas Hill Country - Point Blank Hunts O ther N orth A m erica • Coues Deer - Arizona – Steven Ward • Antelope - Wyoming – John Harris • Blacktail Deer for Youth – Arrow Five Outfitters International • Dove - Argentina – Dove – Pacu Pavcovich • Plains Game – South Africa – Likhulu Safaris M iscellaneous Trips • Raft Adventure - Idaho – Whitewater Adventures • Shooting Course – Nevada, Front Sight – Ken Fish • Shooting Course - Utah – Thompson Long Range C rooked H orn O utfitters Danell and Lennis Janzen www.crookedhorn.com Tehachapi, CA H unt in Europe Srdja Dimitrijevic www.huntineurope.com info@huntineurope.com Marbella, Spain D ick Lym an O utfitters Dick Lyman www.huntfishmontana.com dklyman@huntfishmontana.com Great Falls, MT Black D og O utfitters Darren Puetz www.blackdogoutfitters.com darren@blackdogoutfitters.com Idaho Falls, ID C ape to C airo Safaris Cedric & Karin Nieuwoudt www.capetocairosafari.com cedric@capetocairosafari.com Marietta, GA Fort Bragg Furniture M art 235 North Franklin Street Fort Bragg, CA 95437 707.964.2501 7 CA FNAWS GOLDEN BOY by Marty Larsen was a real eye opener. Prior to this trip all I had to go on was pictures and misconceptions. I own a truckload of camo clothes, but none of the lighter color desert pattern; I couldn’t believe I had to buy more. Then one of my buddies had to visit his folks in Alaska, and another had stomach cancer. (Note: he is doing okay now, with a lot of people in his corner praying for him.) Fast forward many anxious months later, and finally I arrive (sans buddies, for a true DIY hunt) on the hunting grounds with great anticipation, only to have the truck immediately break down with no power. This is really fraying my nerves and a bit worrying of a start. I called Andy Pauli and the cavalry arrived. (well, one good man in a Toyota named Le Hayes) More on this later. I was furious about it at the moment, chomping at the bit to hunt, and could have easily lost focus. With my truck more than 80 miles away in Barstow being worked on, I was still able to hunt a half day for two days thanks to Le. Then we retrieved it, and after two fruitless half days combing some of the most barren, treacherous, unforgiving and God-forsaken country I have ever seen, I again called the local biologist and now my friend, Andy Pauli, to relate the rescue and results of my time in the field. He mentioned that on opening week the majority of kills were in the Kelso Peak area instead of the Old Dads, where I was concentrating my efforts. The next day found me hiking deep into the southeastern area below The Kelso, and I immediately came into contact with groups of rams. It was exhilarating. The first two I spotted looked great at first glance; however, upon closer inspection, and also practicing my stalking skills, they were not shooters. I called them lefty and righty, as each had one horn on opposite sides broken off. Having an absolute blast looking, finding, stalking and judging sheep was all they said it was going to be. I could do this forever; however, I was losing track of time, the day was getting long, and I finally spotted the ram I wanted at approximately 450 yards away on the next ridge with a stiff wind in my face. I felt I could not reasonably make a confident shot on such a magnificent animal, his full curl, class IV horns glowing golden in the sunlight, with a beautiful contrasting dark chocolate coat. I wanted him bad. After watching for a long time, he and his entourage finally bedded down as I finalized my plan to stalk him. No way to go down into the draw separating us and then straight up at him as exposure was too great. The best way was to go back up the ridge in the blazing December sun (only in California) approximately 2/3 mile where it connected with the ridge they were on, then back down using boulders and cacti for cover, dropping below the crest to side hill when needed. Willing to do anything needed to Luck and a lotta help! That is the only way this could have turned out as good as it did. I have been applying for the highly prized Bighorn sheep tag ever since you could. I, like many others in the lottery drawing for the extremely limited number of tags available, figure the odds are it won’t be you, but you gotta be in the game at least. And being familiar with the preference point system from other western states, I was extremely happy with California’s adoption of one, knowing it will up the odds if you stick with it. I am not usually happy with anything this state does, fish and game especially. Fast forward many years later, and pure bliss happened in the form of a letter from DFG last July. There were the words “successful” and Nelson Bighorn Sheep tag. Unbelievable! It then hit me I knew next to nothing about this magnificent, highly coveted big game animal. The phone calls came soon after, starting with a congratulatory call from a great guy, highly dedicated biologist Andy Pauli. Then the outfitters, guides, and members of various clubs, all real nice fellers willing to spend a lot of time explaining some of the myriad of questions I had concerning every aspect of the hunt. It was a quick learning curve and very enjoyable, but alas, in the end I just could not afford their services. But I just had to pull this off somehow, as I also could not afford to let this truly once-in-a-lifetime opportunity slip by. As a seasoned deer and elk hunter with my own wall tent and wood stove, I began to think I just might be able to do a DIY hunt with a buddy. A big plus was I able to use the savings to upgrade my optics, something that I will continue to enjoy the rest of my hunting life. After the orientation class in October I was able to get a couple of good scouting days in, and a good thing, because it CA FNAWS 8 Fall 2010 approach these three buddies, all facing outward in different directions helped, as it was one, if not the most challenging stalk for me ever. I wouldn’t have it any other way. It took stooping, scooching, and crawling on hands and knees in broken glass-like sand, not the soft, beach type, getting poked by cholla (that really hurt), sliced by a sword-like cacti, under the relentless desert heat to get close enough undetected. (I know, it was winter, but it was very warm) I discarded my tall, dark backpack as I inched ever closer to my final destination in the form of a large boulder, which later proved a bad move because my range finder was in it. Back to guesstimating, with no spotter. Apparently I do not do well, because I thought they were about 200 yards, which would have been great, as that is what my rifle was sighted in for. But that was no way near the actual distance as I was about to experience in a dramatically and startling way. I watched for a long time as they slept to make sure which ram was the one, when suddenly they all jumped up looking in my direction. I know not why — if the wind changed, or I made a noise. Whatever it was, I knew what time it was — it was Show Time. Golden Boy gave me a perfect broadside shot, and as I carefully squeezed off my first 165 gr. Hornady SST bullet in 30-06 caliber, I fully expected something other than him still standing there, still looking at me, and still broadside. Not comprehending there was a problem, I again dutifully placed the crosshairs dead on, hoping for a better result this time, and pulled the trigger. Wow, they were all still there, albeit shifting much closer to the edge of the canyon for a quick drop out of sight, and very much more noticeably nervous. I am too, as I still cannot wrap my head around the distance only being 100 yards and those first two shots went well over his back. He was facing me now with a much smaller target opportunity being the front of his chest. I was grateful and unbelieving I even had the chance of a third try. Crack-whoom! Dadgum if he did not go down this time, hoofs in the air, along with some hearty hollering. I could finally make some noise, and lots of it, too. Shaking as I approached this gorgeous creature, I marveled at the large horns compared to a rather smallish body. This could be why I thought the yardage was much farther than the mere 100 yards I paced off, and gradually began to put the picture together. As I wiped his face off for the pictures, a small hole appeared right between and just below the eyes for a practically perfect, unintentional, head shot. Immediate kill, no bullet exit — that is how hard their head is. Holy cow, now I realized just how lucky — really, really, lucky — I was to harvest this trophy. The factors involved were many: logistics, costs, weather, machinery breakdowns, near mental breakdowns, among others. But above all, the unselfishness of a few good men and women to help the sheep, and sheep hunters, in a fix. It all came together, overwhelmingly — what had just transpired, the culmination of events leading to this moment of realization, awe, and extreme gratefulness to all. I have special thanks to DFG biologist Andy Pauli for his efforts to help me harvest a ram, but also for sending the “Angel in the Desert,” as I call him. His real name is Le Hayes of Baker, California, SCBS member and a very good man I will never forget. I deeply appreciate his many trips from town out to camp and back to help me get my truck running. And by so doing, I was able to keep hunting instead of wasting precious hours and days trying to mobilize the right people myself. I so badly wanted to reward him monetarily for his costs and rescue efforts, but he would have none of that. His one request was not for him, but for the sheep. He asked me to join the Society for the Conservation of Bighorn Sheep, which I promptly and proudly did in his honor, immediately upon returning home. In addition, I have a new appreciation for this special country. It is very much not God-forsaken. I was astounded years ago when my grandparents used to visit the wildflowers and revel in the beauty of the desert, not having a clue why. I do now; it is so very amazing with a magical quietness that anyone can appreciate, along with a harsh beauty staggering in its intensity to survive. I wish to return someday just to be an observer or take some pictures and relive this unbelievable adventure. D Low a Boots Dan Hill www.lowaboots.com dan@endlessadventuresales.com Truckee, CA A ction W hitew ater A dventures Verle Duerden www.riverguide.com info@riverguide.com Provo, UT International A dventures U nlim ited Michael H. Grosse www.internationaladventures.us intadvun@gunnison.com Gunnison, CO C hungo C reek O utfitters Greg Kristoff www.travelnordegg.com/chungocreek/ Nordegg, Alberta, Canada Fall 2010 9 CA FNAWS PHOTOS FROM THE FIELD Anna Norris-Vorisek Dall Ram Alaska First woman to achieve an Archery Grand Slam® / FNAWS (Grand Slam is the registered trademark of GSCO) Gary Schenone Stone Sheep August 2010 British Columbia Corey Knowlton Rocky Mountain Bighorn Sheep August 2010 Wheeler Peak, NM Rocky Mountain Bighorn Winter Kill from Cadomin Mine CA FNAWS 10 Fall 2010 Desert Bighorn Sheep at Drinker Rocky Mountain Bighorn in Oregon BALLO T O N PO SSIBLE CA FN AW S N AM E CH AN G E Please let us know your vote on the follow ing by Septem ber 30,2010 (e-mail – forthesheep@gmail.com; fax – (650) 472-3889; or mail - 423 Broadway #617, Millbrae, CA 94030-1905) • Idaho WSF (formerly Idaho FNAWS) • WSF - Midwest Chapter (formerly MN-WI FNAWS) • Montana WSF (formerly MT FNAWS) • New Mexico WSF (formerly NM FNAWS) • Wyoming WSF (formerly WY FNAWS) My preference for what we call ourselves is: 1. California Chapter Foundation for North American Wild Sheep (CA FNAWS) – Name remains unchanged 2. California Wild Sheep Foundation – New name Costs for CA FNAWS to change are estimated to be ~$500 or less (website registry, name changes to website items, stationery, display booth, new Banner) a. If you select this option, please circle one: CAWSF or CWSF or CAWS If we change our name, there is an updated charter from WSF that would also be included. Your Board has reviewed this as a draft and believes any agreement made would be fully consistent with our current commitments and practices. Background for your consideration: The national/international organization formerly called the Foundation for North American Wild Sheep (FNAWS) has been doing business as the Wild Sheep Foundation (WSF) for two years. N ote:CA FNAWS already owns the domain name cawsf.org Of the 13 Chapters, 8 have changed their names: • Alaska WSF (formerly AK FNAWS) • WSF Alberta (formerly Alberta FNAWS) • Eastern Chapter WSF (formerly Eastern Chapter FNAWS) Fall 2010 The other two domain names — cawsf.org and caws.org — are owned by other organizations. 11 CA FNAWS WATER IN THE DESERT BENEFITS WILDLIFE Agency Cooperation Needed By Gary Thomas, SCBS Projects Coordinator Now water is something I know about, old Billy Bob knows what kind of water is best for whisky and Dr. Vern Bleich knows where to put replacement water. He also has seen how botulism in water can kill a lot of wildlife and I have seen what happens when a water hole goes dry. In mid-August this year 39 or more Burros died at Fenner Springs from one or the other, maybe both were the cause of this die off. Let me say I wasn’t there and only know what I have been told by the people who were there and were involved later. Now Fenner Springs isn’t a typical spring where water comes out of the rock or ground, at Fenner Spring a tunnel was cut in to the hill so water would collect in the back of the tunnel and be used. A rancher checking on his cattle found the tunnel packed with dead burros and others outside dead. He call the BLM and they came out and tried to remove the burros by tying a rope on the burros and pulling them out with a horse but could only get a few out. They were packed in and starting to rot so they brought in a back hoe to dig them out but couldn’t get them all. At that point they caved the tunnel in and buried the rest. The only problem is water starts to come out from the caved-in tunnel so they dig out a hole in front of the tunnel for wildlife to drink. While all this is going on they also have 13 live burros looking for water so they bring in tanks and use a helicopter to haul water in for the burros. As burros are not supposed to be in this area BLM is going to round them up and take them to Ridgecrest for adoption. At this point things are looking good but we have to go back to what killed the burros, was it botulism that killed them or a lack of water. BLM had a vet out and he said that they died from dehydration. The nearest water is 12 miles away and for burros that isn’t a long ways even in August and because they have been in the area for years they know where all the water is. If it was botulism it will remain in the water until all the protein is gone. BLM has taken water samples and will check the site daily for dead wildlife. Now what can we learn from this, one is that wildlife need to be elevated to the same level of concern and protection as the land because without the wildlife the land is not worth a bucket of warm spit. The California Department of Fish and Game need to restart their program for building wildlife drinkers. The BLM, NFS and NPS can help by working with them to speed up the permitting and support drinkers in wilderness areas. And last but most important is for all the groups come together and support water for wildlife where sound science shows it’s needed. The desert is a harsh place and not easy to manage but years ago CDF&G, BLM and SCBS did a good job taking care of the land and wildlife and can do it again by working together. D CA FN AW S 2010 D IRECTO R ELECTIO N RESU LTS The above will join the following persons who were elected in 2009 and whose terms run through June 2011: The following persons were elected for the term of July 2010 – June 2012 • • • • • • • • STEVEN F. BOITANO, San Jose, California MIKE J. BOREL, Alamo, California JOHN CAVIN, Danville, California KEN FISH, Rolling Hills Estates, California BEN GORDON, Princeton, California ROGER L. MCCOSKER, Reno, Nevada BRENTON SCOTT, Littleton, Colorado TAMMY SCOTT, Littleton, Colorado • • • • • PAUL A. BRISSO, Eureka, California JIM R. FITZGERALD, Orange Cove, California TOM GRIFFITHS, Woodlake, California KYLE M. MEINTZER, Reno, Nevada CHRIS SETTELMEYER, Verdi, Nevada Officer elections are held in odd number years, so current officers are still in place through June 2011. The following persons were elected for the term of July 2010 – June 2011 • JOHN R. DRUMMOND, Lodi, California • DONALD C. MARTIN, Elk Grove, California CA FNAWS 12 Fall 2010 CA FNAWS REGIONAL DINNERS By Ken Fish Calling all CA FNAWS members! The Board of CA FNAWS has consistently received input from our members who have expressed a desire for more opportunities to gather with other sheep hunters. Your Board agrees, but we face a significant geographical challenge: our members are scattered throughout California, Nevada, Arizona, and even Colorado, Washington, and Pennsylvania! Unless we were to hold more fundraisers each year (ain’t gonna happen), that makes getting everyone together for regular member’s meetings extremely challenging. But we have members who have stepped up to the challenge! We will be holding regional dinners throughout the state starting in September. In fact, the first dinner will be held on Saturday, September 11, 2010 at The Chart House in Redondo Beach, CA (Los Angeles area). Current president Ken Fish is organizing this dinner, and if you would like to attend, please contact Ken at 310-625-2406 or GSPGeneral@aol.com. The northern California dinner will be held the next day on Sunday, September 12, 2010 at Zio Fraeddo’s in Pleasant Hill, CA (Oakland/San Francisco area). Ex-president Mike Borel is organizing this dinner, and if you would like to attend, contact Mike at 925-937-4180 or mike.borel@contextnet.com. As you read this, these two dinners are nearly upon us, and we need to give the restaurants expected headcount numbers very soon. You can help us simply by deciding to attend and letting us know that you will be there! Fall 2010 Everyone reading this newsletter should also have received a postcard in the mail inviting you to the other gatherings that we have planned. The first of these will be held on Saturday, October 16, 2010 at The Crab Catcher in La Jolla, CA (San Diego area; Ken Fish will also organize this dinner). We will conclude the year with five additional regional dinners on Saturday, November 6, 2010. These will be held at Bud’s Pub and Grill in Dixon, CA (Davis/West Sacramento area; Jason Hairston will organize this dinner), Location TBD in Eureka, CA (North Coast area; Paul Brisso will organize this dinner), Onotria in Costa Mesa, CA (Orange County area; Ken Fish will organize this dinner), the home of Dwight Ortmann (Silicon Valley area; Dwight Ortmann will organize this dinner), and Café 225 in Visalia, CA (mid-state/Central Valley area; Tom Griffiths will organize this dinner). To sign up for any of these dinners, please call the CA FNAWS office at: 650-472-3889 or by e-mail at forthesheep@gmail.com. Additional information will be sent via e-mail prior to each of these events. In order to ensure that we steward our funds to deploy into sheep conservation projects, each of these dinners will be dutch (self-pay), so you can spend as little or as much as you wish for each event. Please remember to let us know if you plan to attend. We look forward to seeing everyone at one of these upcoming regional dinners, and remember to bring a friend who may share your enthusiasm for wild sheep! D G iuseppe C arrizosa Spain Giuseppe Carrizosa www.giuseppecarrizosa.com giuseppecarrizosa@gmail.com Madrid, Spain Sportsm an’s W arehouse www.sportsmanwarehouse.com Rocklin, GA 916.782.9900 W ild Sheep Foundation www.wildsheepfoundation.org Cody, WY A rchery O nly Wayne Piersol www.archeryonly.net wayne@archeryonly.com Newark, CA 13 CA FNAWS DIGISCOPING TIPS FROM SWAROVSKI OPTIK see www.swarovskioptik.us The following applies in principle: the shorter the exposure time, the lower the risk of camera shake that would result in blurring. We therefore recommend that you use your camera’s automatic ‘Speed’, ‘Sport’ or ‘S’ exposure mode (if available). This means that your camera will select the shortest possible exposure when the shutter release is triggered. Preventing V ignetting Use the zoom lens on the camera to zoom in and see if you can eliminate the black areas around the edge. Remain within the optical zoom range and do not use the camera’s digital zoom! Using the digital zoom will result in a loss of image quality. The most suitable ISO sensitivity for the prevailing lighting conditions will be selected automatically by the camera, although you can also change this manually. Low ISO numbers, such as ISO 100 and 200, are intended for use in good lighting conditions. If the environment is darker or has poor lighting, you should select a higher ISO number such as ISO 400 or 800. Avoiding Blurring There are a number of reasons why digiscoping images may be out of focus. You should bear the following in mind when digiscoping: In other words, you are unlikely to go wrong if you select the most suitable level of ISO sensitivity (the automatically selected sensitivity is usually correct) and use the ‘Speed’ program setting. At most, you may need to change the ISO number if the light becomes weaker or you want to photograph fast-moving subjects. 1.Ensure that the spotting scope is focused properly The camera can only capture the image that is passed through the spotting scope. The better the spotting scope is focused on the subject, the better the result. 3.U se your cam era’s self-tim er or rem ote control 2.Select the right cam era settings When digiscoping, the aperture size, exposure time (or shutter speed) and ISO sensitivity have a large influence on image sharpness. The high level of magnification created through the combination of spotting scope and camera results in a high risk of blurring. The aperture is the opening through which light passes in order to reach the camera’s sensor (CCD). Rule number one: avoid all unnecessary movement! Even the pressure of your finger on the shutter release button can often be enough to cause camera shake. The camera’s self-timer is ideal for overcoming this problem. You have two options: either use the camera’s in-built self-timer or a remote control (not available for all cameras). The first option is provided by the camera itself; the second enables you to trigger the shutter release without needing to touch the camera. However, there are a decreasing number of camera models on the market which feature an electronic (remote control) or mechanical (cable) remote shutter release. The size of the aperture (referred to as an f-number, e.g. f2.4 or f5.6), determines the size of the aperture opening and, therefore, the amount of light that is admitted into the camera. To ensure that images are exposed correctly, higher f-numbers (e.g. f7) and the correspondingly small aperture openings require longer exposure times. If the f-number is higher, the aperture opening is larger and the exposure time can be reduced. CA FNAWS 4.Ensure your equipm ent is stable (tripod) Ensure that the spotting scope and camera are highly stable when the image is taken and that 14 Fall 2010 they are not subject to any movement. A tripod is essential for sharp, high-contrast images when taking photographs, much more so than when observing. Optimal stability makes a considerable contribution to image quality. setup on the spotting scope rail in a way that ensures it is balanced horizontally. This will prevent the setup from shaking or moving when you move from your observation position to take photographs. Keep the tripod legs and centre column as low as possible when shooting to allow them to dampen vibrations more efficiently. 5.H igh-quality optics High-quality optical and mechanical materials, the lowest tolerance limits, 100% quality control – just some of the parameters for outstanding optical performance. Be sure to seek out the best quality when choosing your camera, spotting scope and eyepiece. High definition (HD) lenses in particular help ensure that the images reproduced are bright with lifelike colors. D It is particularly important that the spotting scope, eyepiece, adapter and camera are all perfectly balanced on the tripod. The spotting scope rail for Swarovski Optik spotting scopes allows this to be done quickly and easily according to your specific requirements. If the tripod head is not fixed, aim to position the entire Fall 2010 Bill Johnson C om pany John Harris Wheatland, WY C alifornia D epartm ent of Fish and G am e Thomas Stephenson www.dfg.ca.gov/about/hunting/ A R H unting C onsultant Abed Radwan www.ibexman.com abed@gci.net Anchorage, AK W estern W ildlife Taxiderm y Aaron Armstrong www.western-wildlife.com aaronhunts@gmail.com Roseville, CA D am a D am a Safaris Resit Kaan Ozmen www.damadamasafaris.com resit@damadamasafaris.com Antalya, Turkey Front Sight Firearms Training Institute Ken Fish www.frontsight.com Rolling Hills Estates, CA G rand Slam C lub/O vis Taylor Deboer www.wildsheep.org Birmingham, AL Steyn C aracal Safaris Abie Steyn www.scssafaris.com absteyn@mailbox.co.za Linden, South Africa 15 CA FNAWS GREEN GUN, BLUE BULLETS, BIGHORN SHEEP By Dr. Norris (Pokey) Cleek 1. Laurel May Hansen became Laurel May Cleek. 2. We used my first paycheck after marriage to purchase my 300 Weatherby. Now that is a woman to marry! Both the woman and the rifle have stuck with me through thick and thin, and both are my overwhelming favorites. A suggestion for young hunters: Buy the best first rifle you can afford and marry above your head. I used the Weatherby for several years until reading some popular outdoor literature. I concluded that I obviously needed to discard the beautiful claro walnut stock and replace it with plastic. I purchased a Brown Precision stock and did the glass bedding myself (solid glass in the chamber is very difficult to remove, but that is another story). I finished the stock with green wrinkle paint. The Prelude The five-ton rogue elephant was approaching directly in front of me as I was hiding behind a 2-foot-high weed. This seemed somewhat inadequate shielding. I put the crosshairs on his forehead for a frontal brain shot, readjusted about 4 inches lower corresponding for the up angle to meet the brain and sent 300 grains of solid into his gray matter. The bull collapsed 16 steps in front of me. Within an hour there were dozens of Africans celebrating the end of their nightmare with this killer pachyderm. I lay in my sleeping bag that night in the chief’s mud brick hut, the continuous question in my brain: “What in the world do I hunt now to match this?” I had no idea. Shooting a blacktail deer seemed like shooting a gopher. Final Product for the H unt 1. Green gun 2. Blue bullets: 130gr Barnes XLC ahead of 92gr of reloader 22 at 3700 fps. I spent a lot of time at the range until this combo shot tight groups 2-1/2 inches high at 100 yards. The Zone The Sheep Hole Mountains are not the end of the world, but you can see it from there. This zone has the fewest sheep, the smallest horns, the most rocks and the steepest terrain. One tag is given for the entire zone for the season. The Tag I returned to America several months later after completing four years as a medical missionary in West Africa, teaching young African doctors the art and science of modern surgery. I nearly suffered apoplexy when I opened the mail and found the notice of a successful draw for Nelson bighorn sheep in the Sheep Hole Mountains. I returned the application the same day by certified mail. The O utfitters Dry Creek Outfitters: I have hunted many species with outfitters from Alaska to Africa; Dry Creek Outfitters are A#1. Hands down the best. Look no further if you are hunting sheep. The hunt rapidly developed into a friendship, not a business. 1. Tim Mercier: Slow talking, looks you in the eye and means what he says. Vast knowledge of the desert and its flora and fauna. A wealth of knowledge of the history of Native Americans in this region. The G un Months in advance I began working up loads for the big hunt. Hand loads included 100gr Barnes XLC in a 25/O6 @3250 fps, 100gr XLC in 257 Weatherby at 3690 fps and finally 130gr XLC in my 300 Weatherby magnum @ 3700 fps. Each of these guns were under 1 inch at 100 yards. I settled on the “Green Gun,” the 300 Weatherby. Two big events occurred during my surgical internship in 1976. CA FNAWS 2. Cliff St. Martin: Very knowledgeable of sheep and their habits. Able to judge a bighorn sheep through 15 power Swarovski binoculars within a gnat’s eyelash. Encyclopedic knowledge of firearms and ballistics. Tougher than old shoe leather. 16 Fall 2010 3. Grover Dobyns: Savvy wisdom that comes only from years spent worshiping God. A great cook and skilled at spotting sheep. 4. Clay Gibert: Vision of an eagle with the back of a mule. A great guy with the vigor and enthusiasm of youth — may some of it rub off on my aging bones. 5. Mike Trinca: My longtime hunting partner, and the best hunter I know, who was invited to join our hunt. The G ear 1. Private tent for hunters with wall-to-wall carpet 2. Optics: Swarovski binoculars 3. The food: double throw down good the mountain in the rain, I asked Cliff the usual question, “Any rattlesnakes here?” After assurance that this was not possible at this time of the year, a couple of steps further and there beside my boot was a Mojave sidewinder. Thankfully he was much too cold to be any threat. We ascended the canyon and could hear a sheep bleating, got a visual — a ewe, no ram. Day 6: The previous evening Cliff said he would get up at 3:00 a.m. so he could walk several miles further to a new area to scout. The rest of us hunted all day without success. Time was now starting to close in. This was a ten-day hunt and six days had passed without a shot being fired. That evening Cliff returned with news of spotting a big ram. We retired that night with full stomachs, happy hearts and sore feet. Day 7: Up at 3:00 a.m. After a hearty breakfast, drove to the end of the road and started the long pre-dawn walk. Cliff and I walked the desert floor for miles while Tim and Grover scouted other areas. At daybreak there he was — a beautiful ram, perhaps a mile away up a canyon. Again the plan was to skirt the ridges and ambush him over a ridge we estimated to be 200 to 300 yards from his position, with the sun at our back and no problem with the wind. We stalked the ram all morning, finally coming to the point of ambush. As we looked over the ridge, our trophy had vanished. We scoured the ridge where he was last seen for perhaps two hours. Still no sheep. We were both exhausted, foot sore, discouraged, and in general feeling lower than a centipede with fallen arches. With perhaps only a hundred yards to the end of the ridge, we sat down and rested and discussed the major issues of life, sore feet and tired bones. Cliff insisted that I put my rifle in his backpack to give me a break on the walk out to the valley floor. We regrouped and walked perhaps ten steps, Cliff with the butt of my rifle sticking out of the top of his pack and me dragging my 60-year-old soft surgeon’s body after him. Then suddenly we heard the noise of falling rocks, and the vision 30 yards directly ahead and The Trip Mike and I got a late start the evening preceding opening day of the hunt. The rams in the Sheep Hole Mountains migrate out of the zone into the adjacent Marine Corps reserve and are out of bounds. Got to get there in early season before the migration. My job as medical director of trauma services gave us a late start; however “the crew” left us explicit instructions on reaching the camp, and just like Motel Six, left a lantern burning. Arrived in the middle of the night. Tom Bodett was not there, but a well-arranged tent and comfortable cot were. The H unt This actually started with the guides scouting for us several days before our arrival. They saw a huge ram for this zone that they were sure would be the zone record. Day 1: We awakened to a hearty breakfast, then drove to the jumping off point, followed by a walk to the canyon of the big boy. This was going to be quite an efficient hunt; unfortunately the ram did not understand the rules. Glassed all day — no ram, only a few ewes. Day 2: Like the ‘60s song “Henry the Eighth, second verse the same as the first,” no ram. Days 3-5: Hunted hard, much walking, glassed canyons until my eyes nearly fell out. Saw a really good ram crest over a ridge. Hightailed it to the next canyon — no ram. Do these sheep dig foxholes and crawl in them? The next day Tim spotted a very good ram, perhaps a mile away. All day was spent following terrain to keep out of vision. We kept the sheep out of our vision, but apparently we were not out of his. We never saw him again. A long walk that night on the desert floor to culminate a hard day of hunting. A new idea for the next day — walk several miles across the desert floor to a canyon that “always holds sheep.” Beginning the climb from the desert floor up Fall 2010 17 CA FNAWS 30 feet up on a rocky bluff was the sheep of our dreams staring at us with only his head and shoulders visible. Cliff fell on all fours and I grabbed the rifle butt from the top of his pack and pulled, nothing happened. Apparently the Harris Bipod was stuck in the viscera of his pack. I now generated all of the force of a desperate man and pulled with all of my dwindling strength, perhaps dragging Cliff across the rocky ground. The rifle broke free and the pack vomited it into my hand, but the sheep was gone again. A couple of seconds later Cliff exhorted “Kill ‘im. Kill ‘im.” I would have been glad to, but there was no sheep in my visual field. Cliff directed my vision 80 degrees to my right, and there was the ram perched on a ridge 100 yards away, one step from escape. I wanted to sit down, extend the bipod and make a perfect shot; however my gut feeling was to shoot now or he would be gone forever. I threw the rifle up and sent 130 grains of copper in the direction of the ovis at 3700 fps. When I recovered the line of sight from the recoil, the sheep was gone. I uttered a quick silent prayer to the effect “God, I sure hope I hit him.” Cliff stayed to watch the mountainside while I ran down a gully and over the ridge. Just over the crest was a xerophyte covered with red blossoms. Obviously the desert does not bloom in winter, but lung blood does. Ten yards further was a boulder painted red, then a few steps further, the trophy of a lifetime. Tim joined Cliff and I, and we skinned and boned the meat and put it in our packs. Necropsy showed the chest full of blood and the heart completely separated from the great vessels. Walking out we found a half dozen 20mm cannon shells left over from World War II fighter aircraft strafing training. Several miles further, the walk into the night brought us to the 4X4 and the end of a hunt of a lifetime. Epilogue At the checkout station, Andy Pauli, the DFG biologist, said that this was the second largest ram ever taken for the Sheep Hole Mountains. I do not remember the B&C score and am not interested in it. We place way too much emphasis on the marks of a ruler and much too little in the pure joy of the hunt. This was a good one. D Lim crom a Safaris Hannes Els www.limcroma.com hannes@limcroma.com South Africa D rake D aw son Safari Unlimited LLC safariunlimited@juno.com New Bloomfield, MO W ard’s O utfitters Steven Ward www.wardsoutfitters.com trophyhunts@wardsoutfitters.com Wilcox, AZ M exico H unts Sergio Jimenez Lezama www.mexicohunts.com sjimenez@vitro.com Nuevo Leon, MX Sitka G ear David Brinker www.sitkagear.com Napa, CA Point Blank H unts Joe Jakab www.pointblankhunts.com joejakab@pointblankhunts.com Pittsburgh, PA C ordoba H unting SA Faco Pavcovich usa@cordobahunting.com info@cordobahunting.com Cordoba, Argentina Furs by Robert Brian and Jeanne Smith PMB #133 3760 Market St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 503.390.4786 CA FNAWS 18 Fall 2010 RECOVERY OF SIERRA BIGHORN Active Management Supplements Colonization By Tom Stephenson, Ph.D. CA DFG A recent focus of the recovery program has been to further our understanding of the dynamics of the Mt. Warren Herd Unit, the northernmost occupied herd unit. Lee Vining Canyon in the southern part of this herd unit was the site of 2 reintroductions in 1986 and 1988. Immediately following the initial translocations, the herd grew but by 2002 it declined to as low as 5 females (adults and yearlings). About that time, we began to start placing GPS collars on animals in this small herd. We discovered that over the next several years, the core of the population appeared to be shifting to the north towards Lundy Canyon. During 2009, we augmented the Mt. Warren herd with 6 pregnant adult ewes (3 each from Wheeler Ridge and Mt. Langley). Based on a habitat suitability model and the recent shift north by the herd, we translocated the 6 ewes into Lundy Canyon. By well into fall 2009, 5 of the 6 lambs born to new residents were still alive (83% survival is very high for lambs in a wild population). One year posttranslocation, all 6 ewes had survived and the number of yearlings suggested high overwinter lamb survival as well. During summer 2010, a survey of Lundy Canyon revealed that the Mt. Warren herd now numbers 21 ewes (16 adults and 5 yearlings) and 11 lambs. The optimal habitat in Lundy Canyon along with the positive demographic trend has created renewed optimism for the eventual recovery of bighorn in the northern part of their historical range as well as the southern. D Recovery of Sierra Nevada bighorn sheep is dependent upon increasing the number and distribution of this unique subspecies throughout California’s highest mountain range. The recovery effort is a combination of active management and monitoring. In some areas, bighorn sheep are reoccupying historic range on their own. This is really only possible in places where vacant habitat exists adjacent to occupied herd units. A number of such colonizations have occurred in recent years. In particular, the Bubbs Creek herd originated most likely from the Mount Baxter herd. Just this year, we found evidence that the Convict Creek herd unit was occupied and those animals likely moved in from the Wheeler Ridge herd. In addition, bighorn are selecting for preferred habitat within herd units and in some cases expanding their boundaries. Past authors have suggested that bighorn sheep were poor colonizers; it may simply be that colonization events are rare and difficult to document. Monitoring is an essential component to tracking the progress towards meeting the numerical and geographic goals outlined in the Recovery Plan. The Recovery Plan for Sierra bighorn requires that 12 of 16 herd units be occupied for downlisting and delisting. There are 4 recovery units that contain all herd units. Of the 12 herds that are required, 8 are now occupied including the recent addition of the Convict Herd to this list. Both herd units in the Kern Recovery Unit are still unoccupied and the Southern Recovery Unit still has 2 unoccupied units. Both the Central and Northern Recovery Units meet the geographic requirement of 2 occupied herd units each. In the Northern Recovery Unit, the recent focus has been on augmenting sparsely populated herds. Small herds are likely more prone to the effects of random events such as severe weather and inbreeding. Society for the C onservation of Bighorn Sheep Steve Marschke, President www.sheepsociety.com K .E.Pack W atercolors K. E. Pack www.kepackwatercolors.com Ramona, CA Joshua Spies Fine A rt Joshua Spies & John Coulter www.joshuaspies.com Tracy, MN Fall 2010 19 CA FNAWS WSF CHAPTER & AFFILIATE MEETING 10-0625-6 SUMMIT III Notes from Meeting Held June 25-26 in Edmonton, Alberta By Mike J. Borel, Representing CA FNAWS and SCBS D irectors Present:Thornton, Meintzer, R. Young, Nowicki, Boone, Rupp, Middleton, Gordon (alternate) • Wants us to be more involved in land use decisions - $ are important, but it’s not enough (vocal, active, at the table) o We are bighorn sheep advocates and we believe fire is needed to improve habitat • Several levels of planning to be involved with o Forest management plans (~15 year frequency) o Allotment buyouts o NEPA documents • How do you start o Understand the system o Figure out who you can cooperate with (who often will have opposing views on some items); establish a Bighorn Sheep Coalition (include persons bringing money, political influence, legal knowledge and capability) o Get on “interested parties” list so get information and know schedules o Ask for directions • Neil is doing great, but he is not enough • Resources o Citizens Guide to NEPA from USFS o Websites and other publications coming separately C hapters and A ffiliates Present:AK, ID, OR, Eastern, Midwest, IA, CA, SCBS, MT, WY, TBS, UT, RMBS, Alberta President’s Report • $2.85m on the ground this past year ($2.4m to agencies from tag sales), not including any chapter or affiliate work N orthern Sheep & G oat C ouncil – K evin H urley, N eil Thagard,C hris Barker Neil Thagard • Payette National Forest • Total US livestock value $102B (excluding poultry, with poultry $120B) • Total US wildlife value $68B, $120B with fisheries • Gross income in CA for grazing sheep $47.7m, total US $377.1m • Wildlife related activities $5.3B in CA, $21.138B in US • Perfect storm – die-offs elevating awareness of domestic grazing and disease transmission, could help get this sorted out A laska D all Sheep Initiative – W ayne H eim er • Working on a Management Policy A lberta Sheep O verview – Jim A llen Issues • Habitat loss due to trees, fire needed • Predation – wolves, cougars, grizzlies, eagles • Disease although no domestic sheep grazing on BH ranges Kevin Hurley • Northern Sheep & Goat Council o Biennial symposium, Kevin has been leading o http://www.nwsgc.org/ can sign up for enews • WAFWA o Kevin’s job goes away February 1, 2011 o Working on GIS map of all transplants ever, goal to finish by end 2010 o Summer meeting in Anchorage mid-July Trapping & Transplants C hapter & A ffiliate A dm in • Fundraising o Packet in folder o However do NOT depend on purchasing and reselling items, go for 100% donations. Suggest every other year at 100% over every year at 50% o Gray has draft position descriptions for fundraiser roles – send an email request to get it Chris Barker, Wild Sheep Society of BC • All Sheep recently inventoried. Stone Sheep (not a good history), currently back to where it was in ’40s and ’50s • Ecological Goods & Services idea U S Forest Service Review – M elanie W oolever • Bighorn Sheep, Your National Forests and YOU • Grazing allotments reauthorized every 10 years CA FNAWS 20 Fall 2010 • Membership Drive o Regional Meetings / Trophy Room Tours o Kathy Boone idea – “If you want to eat, you have to join.” • Magazine • Make $380/table for ID FNAWS • UT FNAWS endorses the Fishing Trip Papers Provided (and available on request): 1. Understanding Bighorn Pneumonia by Wayne Heimer 2. 2011 Convention Schedule (Proposed) 3. Disease Transmission between Domestic Sheep/Goats and Bighorn Sheep: The Payette National Forest Saga by Neil Thagard 4. WAFWA Update June 22, 2010 5. Chapter & Affiliate Banquet Offers from various companies W SF 2011 C onvention • All Auctions in evening • Wednesday afternoon sporting clays with USA Shooting Team • Wednesday night kickoff, Welcome Back, auction • Thursday morning – Member Meeting, Ladies Luncheon, International Night • Friday morning – Ram awards, evening banquet and auction (casual) • Saturday – Life member breakfast • Want Chapter & Affiliate Sponsors for “One More for Four” • Floor Credit drawings on Thursday, Friday and Saturday in the hall (1:00 each day, for those in the hall that day, drawing for $5000). Need sponsors • Considering a “wall of rifles” sponsored by Chapters and Affiliates PETA RED EPLO YIN G FO RCES TO CALIFO RN IA In what may be a sign of rough economic times, PETA is shifting around forty employees from its Norfolk, Virginia office to Los Angeles. This move will get the country’s most outrageous animal rights group closer to the wealth of some “bleeding heart” celebrities that have fallen prey to PETA’s rhetoric. According to Tracy Reiman, PETA’s executive vice president, it will be transferring three divisions to L.A.: campaigns, youth and online marketing. Reiman said it only makes sense to move certain forces to L.A. since the city “defines popular culture and cultivates big personalities.” She went on to praise the work of those divisions and how they “conceive of and carry out those eye and headline-catching, envelope-pushing and just plain quirky actions that have helped put animal rights on the map.” The divisions being moved make up twenty five percent of PETA’s Virginia staff. Permit Proceeds Accountability • When checks went out, request for report on how used was also made (for the first time). Only three have replied. Working to establish higher accountability. PRAB – Professional Resource Advisory Board • Have outlined a process that includes scrutiny Chuck Middleton Chapter fundraising idea • McDougall Lodge (Ron Jewett) AK Fishing trip (100% donation – but have to bring another for $2900) – to be raffled to 1 of 8 at table, 1 gun – to be raffled to 1 of 8 at table, Memberships for each, drink ticket for each, dinner for each. Total cost 2009 LICEN SE & REVEN U E IN FO FO R CA • $63 million in revenue for fishing licenses for 2 million anglers for DFG Editor’s N ote – I’ve heard PETA is planning to attend all F&G Commission meetings, which means we will likely need to increase hunting group participation. COHA is always there representing us, but more may be needed to “balance or overwhelm the radicals.” • $23 million in revenue for license and tags for 300,000 hunters for DFG. Source: DFG License Data on their website Fall 2010 21 CA FNAWS CA FNAWS 22 Fall 2010 TWO TAGS IN TWO YEARS? IMPOSSIBLE! By Ken Crother odds and drew the only ram tag in that zone that year. It was the first year I had put in as well as the year after I had drawn my California tag! Lucky, I suppose, but throughout my life I had not used much of the supposed luck I was supposed to have and I was glad to burn it up in these two tags. What do I do now? I now had a tag in a zone that encompasses mountains that go to above 10,000 feet and extends roughly 40 miles of range that I was familiar with for deer and elk, but only knew about these sheep in December when they were breeding and now I find that I will be hunting in September. Uh Oh. Fish and game in Idaho was very helpful after numerous phone calls and I ended up with the phone numbers of the 3 previous hunters. As well, my office turned into what looked like a military zone. All walls were covered in maps from fish and game, forest service, BLM, giant Google printouts and also ended up with the Heli survey that was done the previous year but was done in springtime. I had spoken to a few of the guides in the area and had decided that I did not have the funds to go that route and as well the way the guides were concessioned in that area I would be limited with areas to hunt with guides that were seasoned sheep guides. I decided I would do this one on my own. My buddy Mark Shires that had hunted in California was up for going as he could archery elk hunt at the same time, and the next phone call was to Cody Brinkerhoff whom I’d become friends with on my hunt in California. Mark is a great hunter and Cody had eyes like a hawk, but we all had a lot to learn together as this was not going to be your typical elk or deer hunt. Mark and I got into the valley first and we got set up in a friends cabin and started to glass a couple of days before the season opened. Cody could not come until a couple of days into the season as he had prior commitments. After the first few days of seeing nothing I was getting a little concerned. These are big mountains and finding areas to glass from took long drives, quad rides and mean hikes just to get into good areas to set up the spotting scopes. We had been getting in shape the couple of months prior but the altitude seemed to rip us up and it took a few days to get acclimated. Seems it was the second day we ended up finally finding some ewes and lambs and was kind of comical as we ended up getting within a10 to 15 yards or so from them. It couldn’t be this easy, right? A couple of days passed and we continued to sit behind our spotting scopes morning and night and eventually on the fourth day, the day Cody was showing up, we found three rams. None too great, young “Impossible!” “Let me touch you.” “You are the luckiest person in the world.” “Have you bought a lottery ticket?” “I hope some of that rubs off on me.” “Are you kidding me?” Just some of the comments I heard for the few months leading up to my hunt in Idaho in the Fall of 2008. You may have read about my desert sheep I had the opportunity to hunt in California with Mike Hornbarger of Black Rock Outfitters. I had never hunted sheep and had spoken to many sheep hunters about it, and the resounding thing I will never forget was, “once you hunt sheep you will never be the same” and I have to agree. This is why after hunting the first sheep in the Mojave Dessert had inspired a new passion that I may never get over. After completing my first hunt, I could not get it out of my head, it was all I could think about, I would relive my hunt at all times of the day. Not having the resources to start travelling the world hunting sheep, I decided to start putting in all over the West to attempt to get another tag through the process. I found the process quite overwhelming trying to learn the states and their regulations for putting in as well as what were the best to hunt as well as what were the best opportunities to draw. One of the areas I had decided to put in for was in Idaho in an area I have been elk and deer hunting since the early ‘90s. We would often see rams in December on muzzleloader hunts down low and thought well this ought to be a great place to put in and had only been open a few years for hunting so there should be rams all over.??? You might have guessed by now, but I had beat all Fall 2010 continued on page 24 23 CA FNAWS the day off and let things heal up. That evening we were back looking with the sun at our back and Cody found the rams. Four rams one with lamb tips and long, two older rams broomed off and a young “banana head.” It was on, we put em down that evening and headed home to pack for the hike the next day. 3:30 a.m. came early and off we went, hit the trail at 5:00 a.m. and got to the bottom of the main trail headed up the mountain at 7:00 a.m.. We stopped pulled out the scope and started looking and Cody found them up about 9000 feet feeding and moving towards the top. We still had about another 3000 vertical and a long trail to cover to get in there and by noon we were just below the upper basin at about the same level as where the sheep were when we last saw them. There were elk all around, matter of fact Mark had called two young bulls to about 15 yards and we had a standoff for 5 minutes or so until they figured we just weren’t what we thought we were. It took us awhile but eventually Cody found a horn, then the rest of the ram and they were all bedded under some pines out in the middle of the basin to the North. They were well over 1000 yards and no place to make a stalk. Eventually the rams got up and moved to the South and ended up above us in steep very thick cover and we played cat and mouse for the next 6 hours. During this time while we waited we had unexpected visitors in the basin to the South. The sound started as kind of a bark then proceeded to a group of howls. We had a group of wolves below us. I thought this was going to mess up the hunt and I called to check on Cody and he was fine but was now up a tree and was hard to glass from there.It was a blessing these rams did not continue over the top or into the next basin as we would never had seen them again. The country was very steep and Mark and I started a stalk with Cody behind glass trying to keep and eye on the rams. Right around 6:30 one of the rams stepped out and looked right down the hill towards Mark and I, I looked through my scope, it was the ram with his lamb tips, this was the ram I wanted. Mark confirmed and let me know he was 486 yards and that was a very long shot for me. I had been practicing that “500” yard shot with my 300UM but was windy. We had sat on these rams for 6 plus hours and I was ready. I got a good rest adjusted for the wind and let it go, all I remember seeing was dust and rams running. Had I hit him, did I miss? All the questions brewing in my head and I was feeling sick. Cody let us know he saw the rams running and one had blood on his leg but they were heading up hill, bad news. We lost them for half an hour or so then they started following this ram back down the hill and he did not look like he was doing as good as we thought. They disappeared until right before dark, 3 of the 4 rams took off running across the hill and out of sight. We did not see our ram in the group. There was no way to get to him before dark and not a good spot to go in the dark and we set up a little camp site, dined on what we had left to eat, if you can imagine the best of which was Vienna sausages continued from page 23 rams and it felt good to get our eyes adjusted to rams on a hillside as we watched them for a couple of hours. That evening Cody showed up and found his way to the cabin. We set out the next morning to find the rams from the previous day again, hoping that there were more mature rams with the group on the backside of the mountain. I had secured access from a wonderful elderly lady that owns private ground that blocked this drainage the day before and off we went up the mountain. We eventually found the rams and unfortunately was just the same group of youngsters maybe 3 or 4 years old, a sow brown bear and her twins and a couple of deer. Well too early in the trip to get dejected and off we went for the next 3 or 4 days, travelling, from one side of the valley to the other looking through our spotting scopes from the right areas and after this running into my eighth day, now was the time to get dejected. Sheep hunting is hard, and this is why I think I like it so much, but I still think there needs to be a psychologist hotline on call for sheep hunters. This seems to be the time when I can’t get my wife and kids out of my head, the thought that you can never draw this tag in this state again etc. and I had something that kept repeating itself in my head. I had spoken to quite a few people that I knew and didn’t know in the area and one name kept coming up in the conversation, Jim Martiny. Jim used to guide for sheep and his name kept coming up as someone I should talk to and I had not brought myself to track him down. Now was the time. I caught Jim at the local cafe and after a short conversation about how we were doing and why hadn’t we harvested one of the smaller rams, we were in Jim’s driveway in the middle of the valley spotting scopes out and looking at a miserable mountain that held a couple of springs and he let us know there should be sheep within a mile of either direction of that basin. After a lengthy conversation of “what would you do?” Jim explained of a trail that runs up the Southern side of the mountain and that it was a good trail, yet the local guide refers to it as the “horse killin trail.” We started out early the next day on the horse killin trail and left about 5500 feet and ended up at about 9000 feet by the end of the hike. Sore legs and tired spent the day glassing and looking for sheep on top. Only saw a few elk and lots of elk sign and no sheep. Just a little down, we headed down the mountain and only hopped over one rattlesnake and back to the bottom. The phone rang shortly after we got back in the valley and it was Jim, “did ya see em?”, his son Tom had spotted rams in the basin we had been looking in and come to find out they were down in an area we could not have seen from where we were and we were off the mountain. Once again, get me the number to the sheep psychologist! We looked in the basin the next day and did not see the sheep from the valley, unfortunately the sun was directly in our face that morning and we decided to take CA FNAWS 24 Fall 2010 and oysters which at the time could have been fillet mignon. Cody and Mark slept like babies and I laid in my bag listening to elk bugle all night wondering if we would find my ram the next morning. What a long night. We took off at my pushing of the sleepers in the dark, I couldn’t take it anymore, and started up the hill and when we got our bearings, split up about 100 yards apart and headed across the hill. It took about an hour and there he was under a log that had stopped his downhill tumble that had likely pressed the other rams to run off. He was a gorgeous ram and I could not have been more proud. Cody let me use his phone to call my wife and kids and after about all the pictures we could stand, caped and boned him out and started the most miserable walk of my life. We made it off the hill with no major problems other than running out of water which we replenished when we hit the first creek with the pump and filter. Man water is good when you are that thirsty. Made it to the truck and the first call was to Jim to let him know and could not wait to show him the ram when he got off the range that day. The celebration began and were we proud, tired and needed a rest. Cody had lost the bottom of both heals on the hike out, he offered to take the heaviest pack. We were pretty beat up but in hindsight would do it again in a minute. I just got back from a week trip with my kids to Idaho, and standing in the valley looking into that basin continues to kind of haunt me. Caleb and Hannah are 11 and 9 and can’t wait til I can take them into the mountains to enjoy some of the experiences with them on their hunts. I cannot thank my wife, Cindy, enough for her understanding and my kids for being without dad for a couple of weeks. Most of all thanks to Mark and Cody, could not have done it without you two, and for Jim Martiny and his son Tom for their tips and eyes that helped us along. Also to Jim Sanders and his boys Joel, Curt and Karl for allowing me to use a wonderful place to call base camp. D VO LUN TEER O PPO RTUN ITY MISSION PROFILE: Attract and recruit new CA FNAWS members THEATRE OF OPERATIONS: International Sportsman’s Exposition, Cal Expo Center, Sacramento, CA INSERTION DATE: January 20, 2001 EXTRACTION DATE: January 23, 2011 DURATION OF ENGAGEMENT: All or part (minimum 2-hour commitment) SPECIAL TRAINING NEEDED: BUDS/Underwater Demolition Training – None Advanced Combatives (hand-to-hand) – None Close Quarters Battle – None Sniper Training – None Friendliness – REQUIRED Enthusiastic Hunter – REQUIRED Passionate about California Sheep – REQUIRED Willingness to Talk about CA FNAWS – REQUIRED Able to help new members complete application – REQUIRED DETAILS: In years past, the CA FNAWS booth at the International Sportsman’s Exposition has been a source of significant membership growth. This January, we would like up to 34 CA FNAWS members to volunteer to staff 34 x 1-hour slots (Th/F: 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.; Sa: 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.; Su: 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.) during the duration of the Exposition, although two-hour shifts by the same member are encouraged. In the past, a small handful of our members has carried out this mission, but we would like to see wider involvement across our organization, especially from those who live in the mid- and northern parts of the state, for whom Sacramento might be a reasonably short drive. However, out-of-state members and those from Southern California are also invited to participate! If you can sit, if you can gab about hunting in general and sheep in particular, if you read our newsletters and therefore know a little about what CA FNAWS has been doing to help sheep populations in our state, if you think our annual dinner banquet is worthwhile, if you want to help recruit more members into the sheep hunting fraternity…then YOU are qualified for this role. You can do something helpful and worthwhile for wildlife conservation this January, without having to sign up for a four-year hitch or go through bootcamp! Please help us out by volunteering to work our booth. Please notify Beverly at the CA FNAWS office at (650)-472-3889 or forthesheep@gmail.com so we will know when we can expect you. Fall 2010 25 CA FNAWS MOUNTAIN SHEEP, MULE DEER, AND DONKEYS IN THE DESERT by Vernon C. Bleich and Nancy G. Andrew Donkeys, also known as wild asses or burros, are the descendants of the African wild ass (Equus asinus), a creature native to Somalia and Ethiopia in northeastern Africa. They are physiologically well-adapted to the hot, arid environment of northeastern Africa, and have fared well in the deserts of the southwestern United States. Donkeys belong to the order Perissodactyla and the family Equidae, which include modern day horses and their ancestors. The Perissodactyla are ungulates that walk on an odd-number of toes, unlike the Artiodactyla, which are hoofed mammals that have even numbers of toes, such as deer and mountain sheep. Among the Equidae horses, donkeys, and their close relatives walk on a single hoof; other Perissodactyls, such as rhinoceroses, walk on three toes. Donkeys were first domesticated about 6,000 years ago, and were introduced to North America by Spanish explorers, likely in the mid-1500s. Donkeys became the favored pack animals of desert prospectors hoping to strike it rich during the 19th century. As the mining boom of the late 1800s subsided and railroads pushed westward across the Mojave and Sonoran deserts, the utility of donkeys as pack animals declined. As a result, many were abandoned by their owners, which resulted in free-ranging, or feral, populations distributed across the southwestern United States. It is the offspring of those liberated animals that inhabit many desert mountain ranges today, and that are of concern to biologists working to conserve native wildlife. In 1971, Public Law 92-195 was passed by the United States Congress. That legislation, known as the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act, provided unprecedented protection to feral horses and donkeys, and made it illegal to capture, brand, harass, or kill either species without proper authorization. Until passage of PL 92-195, shooting had been the primary means of control, but without that source of mortality populations of donkeys became larger, and their distribution increased. As a result, concern for impacts to native, large mammals, such as mountain sheep and desert CA FNAWS mule deer, intensified. Like most legislation that mandates new programs, allocated funds were inadequate to provide for the management of feral donkeys. During the 1970s, the Bureau of Land Management prepared the California Desert Plan, a multi-million dollar effort that recognized the new-found legal status of feral horses and donkeys, yet also acknowledged the desirability of restricting populations of those exotic equids to specific parts of the California desert. The California Desert Plan identified a number of Herd Management Areas (HMAs) for donkeys, and specified the number of animals to be maintained in each of those HMAs. Unfortunately, funding adequate to ensure that the number of donkeys maintained within each HMA is consistent with management objectives has not been a priority for the federal government. As a result, many populations have continued to increase in size, and donkeys have not been restricted to the specified HMAs, despite the dedication and ongoing efforts of many hard-working personnel. Some well-known and successful efforts to manage populations of donkeys have, nevertheless, been implemented in California. These include efforts in Death Valley National Park, the China Lake Naval Weapons Center and, more recently, the Mojave National Preserve. Attempts to manage donkeys in the HMAs established by the California Desert Protection act have been less successful because funding for those programs has constrained the number of animals that can be processed each year. Because free ranging donkeys can no longer be managed by lethal methods, animals removed from desert habitats must be adopted (a long and complicated process) by members of the public that are interested in maintaining them in captivity. Im pacts to M ountain Sheep The potential impacts of uncontrolled populations of donkeys to desert habitats and, especially, to populations of mountain sheep in the southwestern United States have long been recognized. Following the most detailed analysis of potential 26 Fall 2010 conflicts yet undertaken, the late Rick Seegmiller (an authority on the ecological relationships of exotic donkeys and native mountain sheep) concluded that mountain sheep are too valuable and too limited in distribution to accept the risks of coexistence with those exotic equids. Seegmiller recommended the removal of donkeys from areas inhabited by mountain sheep, as well as areas to which mountain sheep might be translocated in the future. Long before Rick had conducted his research, however, Richard (Dick) Weaver (California Department of Fish and Game - retired) had emphasized the problems that donkeys were creating for mountain sheep. It is our experience in southeastern California that donkeys have, indeed, successfully exploited forage and, recently, water sources in terrain that many biologists formerly believed was habitable only by mountain sheep. Impacts to Desert Mule Deer Another native species for which habitat overlap with free ranging donkeys is much greater than for mountain sheep is the desert mule deer. These large, native ungulates are well-adapted to living in desert washes and in the gently rolling intermountain areas of the Sonoran Desert in southeastern California, areas that are used heavily by donkeys. The impacts of donkeys to forage resources used by mule deer have not been described in detail, but are expected to be similar to, if not exceed, impacts to forage used by mountain sheep. Similarly, dietary overlap between donkeys and mule deer has not yet been quantified thoroughly, but donkeys unquestionably have the potential to reduce availability of forage preferred by native mule deer. Whether or not competition for forage from donkeys would impact mule deer populations is uncertain, but the potential exists for such to occur. Currently, we are involved in research to shed light on the degree of resource overlap between donkeys, mountain sheep, and mule deer. In southeastern California, surface water is an extremely limited resource. During a recent drought, donkeys began to exploit water sources that they had not formerly used. One method of controlling the distribution of donkeys in the past has been to fence them off of water sources. During a recent period of drought, the authors designed and tested a new-style fence that was Fall 2010 effective in allowing native deer and sheep to access water sources, but which prevented use of those water sources by donkeys. That fence design is lightweight, unobtrusive, and highly effective. Although the fence has been installed at numerous water sources outside of designated wilderness areas, construction of those fences inside of wilderness established by the California Desert Protection Act has been restricted severely. Nevertheless, wildlife managers and interested sportsmen-conservationists likely will persist in their efforts to limit the distribution of donkeys through the use of such fences, at least until populations of those feral equids are more effectively regulated by the responsible federal agencies. No matter how well-intentioned some legislation may be, funding must be adequate to allow full implementation. Concerned citizens must do their part to ensure that the federal government provides funds adequate to support the programs that the Congress has forced upon the American people, such as the Wild Freeroaming Horses and Burros Act. Contacting your Congressional representatives, and demanding that management programs for feral donkeys receive adequate funding is a logical way to ensure that impacts of these exotic ungulates to native mountain sheep and mule deer will be less in the future than what they currently are. Remember — there is an election in November. D D r.V ern Bleich w orked for the C alifornia D epartm ent of Fish and G am e (C D FG ) for 34 years before retiring in 2007;he rem ains active in w ildlife conservation, education,and research and serves as an advisor to severalregionaland nationalconservation organizations.V ern can be contacted at vbleich@ ndsupernet.com N ancy G .Andrew is an Associate W ildlife Biologist, and has w orked for C D FG for m ore than 15 years, prim arily in the Sonoran D esert of southeastern C alifornia.N ancy w as honored in 2009 by the C alifornia C hapter of the Foundation for N orth Am erican W ild for her contributions to the conservation of m ountain sheep in C alifornia.This article has been adapted from an article published earlier by the authors,and that appeared in Tracks 17:10-12. 27 CA FNAWS COYOTE RIDGE IS OCCUPIED! Excerpt from Semiannual Report of the Sierra Nevada Bighorn Sheep May 2010 The Coyote Ridge (unoccupied) herd unit is found on a high flat that extends northeast of the Sierra Nevada crest, located immediately SW of Bishop and NW of Big Pine, and is bounded to the west by Bishop Creek (Figure 2). Some patches of excellent potential bighorn sheep habitat exist around the edges of Coyote Ridge and wind removes much of the snow from the top of Coyote Ridge in winter. However, some isolated stands of forest and the lack of steep rocky terrain make the central part of Coyote Flat largely unsuitable habitat for bighorn sheep. Coyote Ridge was not included among those required by the Recovery Plan because alpine summer range and low elevation winter range are separated geographically with suboptimal connectivity. There have been some reports of bighorn sheep sightings in this region over the past few decades. Evidence has included tracks above Thunder and Lightning Lake and an observation of six bighorn including one ram and two lambs on a flat just above Thunder and Lightning Lake by an F-18 jet pilot in late August 1990. A bighorn group at the head of Palisade Creek was observed by Boy Scouts and a geologist familiar with wild sheep observed three bighorn including one ram near Thunderbolt Pass in the summer of 1992 or 1993. These observations all lacked definitive documentation of bighorn sheep, but that changed this past summer. On July 18, 2009, CDFG wildlife biologist Mike Morrison observed and photographed (photos 1 and 2) two female bighorn sheep in Coyote Flat at close range. The ewes were first seen in typical rocky sheep terrain. They then moved lower into brushy sage steppe habitat and continued down to a willow thicket by Coyote Creek. The documented sighting was followed by two surveys conducted by CDFG personnel (Figure 1). From the first survey, two bed sites were observed just to the west of Lookout Mountain and four relatively fresh pellet samples were collected. During the second survey no bighorn were observed, but eight fecal samples were collected near the Hunchback. Genetic analysis indicates that the fecal samples collected were deer. Further surveys will be conducted during the next year. D Figure 1. Location of the ewes and subsequent survey routes. Bighorn ewes first seen in rocky terrain and then moved into brushy sage habitat. CA FNAWS 28 Fall 2010 PHOTOS FROM TRAIL CAMS ON WILDLIFE WATER DEVELOPMENTS IN DESERT SHEEP COUNTRY OF CALIFORNIA Thanks to Bob Burke, SCBS Camera Coordinator and CA FNAWS member, for sharing these pictures! Fall 2010 29 CA FNAWS RECENT LITERATURE RELATED TO BIGHORN SHEEP Assembled by Esther Rubin (DBC Secretary) an area they avoided. Mountain sheep used steeper slopes, areas of lower terrain roughness, higher elevations, and areas closer to escape terrain than were random points. In contrast, sheep avoided areas near roads (federal and state highways, local roads, and off-road vehicle trails) but used areas near hiking trails and a railway. Water sources had the smallest effect of the factors considered, with sheep being associated with areas further from water points than were random locations. The disturbed area associated with the mines had a moderate influence on distribution, with sheep being associated with areas closer to the mine than were random points. Mining activities can alter terrain features and vegetation structure or composition in a way that promotes occupancy by sheep if they create steep slopes and rugged terrain (escape terrain) or reduce vegetation density or height (i.e., improve visibility). Whether increased occupancy reflects a benefit depends on the demographic responses of those sheep to the resources and conditions available on mine sites; information about those responses remains lacking. Bleich, V. C., J. P. Marshal, and N. G. Andrew. 2010. Habitat use by a desert ungulate: predicting effects of water availability on mountain sheep. Journal of Arid Environments 74(6):638-645. Abstract: Provision of surface water has been a long-standing management strategy to enhance habitat for large mammals in southwestern North America. In this paper, we use a resource selection function (RSF) developed from telemetered mountain sheep (Ovis canadensis) in three occupied mountain ranges in the Sonoran Desert, California, USA, to examine the effects of water development on habitat quality within those ranges. Further, we apply that model to four nearby and similar mountain ranges, but for which telemetry data are not available, and again examine the effects of water development. When distance to water was decreased to 2,000 m from an average of 3033 m (+/- 522 [SD]) in three occupied mountain ranges, availability of high-quality habitat increased by as much as 92%. When distance to water was decreased to 2,000 m from an average of 3660 m (+/- 799 [SD]) in three mountain ranges not occupied permanently by mountain sheep, and one occupied range for which telemetry data were not available, the proportion of high-quality habitat resulting from application of our model indicated increases that varied from 116 to 508%. We conclude that development of additional sources of surface water can increase availability of high-quality habitat for mountain sheep inhabiting Sonoran Desert mountain ranges, and that the technique has implications for population persistence and conservation of those large, specialized ungulates. Brown, N. A., K. E. Ruckstuhl, S. Donelon, and C. Corbett. 2010. Changes in vigilance, grazing behaviour and spatial distribution of bighorn sheep due to cattle presence in Sheep River Provincial Park, Alberta. Agriculture Ecosystems & Environment 135(3):226-231. Abstract: The physical presence of livestock can influence the behaviour of native ungulates. Behavioural data on bite rates and vigilance of Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep were collected during the summer and fall of 2006 in Sheep River Provincial Park, Alberta. Spatial distributions of bighorn sheep and domestic cattle were recorded using daily censuses and GPS collar locations during the same time period. We hypothesized that the presence of cattle would induce a negative behavioural response in bighorn sheep and cause avoidance behaviour. As predicted, foraging bite rates decreased and vigilance rates increased when cattle were located nearby. Vigilance in females was higher than in males. The average distances between bighorn sheep and cows were found to be smaller than expected at random, and minimal distances were not affected by the presence of cows. The sheep were found in the same general areas used by cattle. The cattle presence was shown to influence distribution and behaviour of bighorn sheep, although not in the way we expected. Bleich, V. C., J. H. Davis, J. P. Marshal, S. G. Torres, and B. J. Gonzales. 2009. Mining activity and habitat use by mountain sheep (Ovis canadensis). European Journal of Wildlife Research 55(3):183-191. Abstract: We studied mountain sheep in the vicinity of three high-wall limestone mines in San Bernardino County, CA, USA to evaluate factors that influenced habitat use and, specifically, to investigate the influence of mining activity on distribution of those specialized ungulates. We used aerial telemetry data to estimate a resource selection function by fitting a logistic regression model and then comparing environmental characteristics at observed sheep locations to those at random locations. Distribution of mountain sheep was most influenced by a fire in 1999 that resulted in CA FNAWS 30 Fall 2010 Fall 2010 31 CA FNAWS WILD SHEEP WIN HISTORIC VICTORY by Kyle Meintzer, CA FNAWS Director of Operations For far too many years, wild mountain sheep have been losing a life-and-death battle over the issue of contact with disease-carrying domestic sheep. No more. In late July, the US Forest Service released its long-awaited decision on the matter of separation of bighorn sheep and domestic sheep in the Payette National Forest … and wild sheep won! See this link for the full report: http://www.fs.fed.us/r4/payette/publications/ big_horn/index.shtml This is a tremendous victory for wild mountain sheep throughout the western and southwestern states. The decision allows the status quo to stay in place through the end of 2010, but then requires a phased-in separation of wild and domestic sheep from 2011 through 2013, when total separation is required. Interaction between domestic sheep and wild sheep is likely responsible for the deaths of ~1,000 wild sheep this past winter in four states and has been an on-going problem for decades. Indeed, unregulated harvest and contact with domestic sheep are the primary reasons wild sheep populations in the lower 48 plunged from as many as 2,000,000 animals in 1850 to just 15,000 in 1970. Thanks to the work of The Wild Sheep Foundation and its many Chapters and affiliates, there are now ~70,000 wild sheep in the lower 48. This decision will affect all US Forest Service lands and I’m told that BLM will implement a similar policy. California’s wild bighorn sheep will benefit from this decision, of course, as there are two domestic sheep producers who graze on USFS lands that have the potential to impact the threatened Sierra bighorn sheep herd. The Wild Sheep Foundation has been a major player in winning this case, spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on the contact issue. WSF’s Director of Operations, Neil Thagard, has been WSF’s point man in this fight for the past several years. Neil has gone anywhere and everywhere he was needed to educate policy makers, politicians and the public on this critical issue. His dedication and passion was vital in helping WSF and its conservation partners win this great victory for wild bighorn sheep! The net result of this USFS decision will mean that wild mountain bighorn sheep will soon see the threat they’ve faced for generations is about to come to an end. Wild sheep, conservationists, and therefore hunters will be the beneficiaries of this decision. D CA FNAWS 423 Broadway #617 Millbrae, CA 94030 www.cafnaws.org
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