McKean Potter Source 10-25-2022

Page 1

25 2022

community

OCTOBER

p o t t e r m c k e a n

county

Austin • Coudersport • Crosby • Eldred • Kane • Lewis Run • Mt. Jewett Port Allegany • Roulette • Smethport • Turtlepoint

Photo by Pennsylvania Game Commission It’s not easy to visually determine the age of a whitetail deer in Pennsylvania.

How old is that deer outside the window?

PITTSBURGH (TNS) — The rut is approaching fast. At the height of mating season, whitetail deer will be hormonally addled, acting strangely and oblivious to even the most extreme dangers. Knowing a deer’s age can explain some of its actions and help to predict future behaviors. Wildlife watchers can estimate the age of familiar backyard browsers using the long-established observational tools relied upon by hunters. “Aging” a deer on the hoof can be an important part of the hunt. Establishing personal harvest parameters before leaving home is routine among many experienced hunters. It’s a conservation thing. Deciding to pass on deer that haven’t reached reproductive age means allowing a 1 1/2-year-old buck to grow into a healthy 3 1/2-year-old, 8-point that has left its mark on the gene pool. Or it could mean choosing to cull an aging doe that will no longer

reproduce but is consuming valuable nutrition in sparse woodlands. The buck outside your window cannot be accurately aged by counting points. Production of antlers has more to do with nutrition than age or genetics. Antlers are not horns, which are permanently attached to the skulls of cattle. Antlers develop from the fastest-growing tissue known to science — densely packed blood vessels that advance as much as 1 inch per day in the spring. The vessels close, die and harden. Dead tissue on the outside of antlers, “velvet,” is scraped off. The buck usually continues scraping or polishing his hardened antlers, using them in head-to-head battles for breeding rights. Antlers are generally shed after the rut in late winter. In old bucks or in deep woods and other places where browse is minimal, less nourishment reaches the tissue, impeding growth and creating

smaller antlers with fewer points. In robust, fertile, year-round deer smorgasbords like suburban housing plans, high-quality nourishment results in advanced antler growth. Physical cues are more useful in gauging a deer’s age. Biologists with access to tranquilized deer examine wear of the premolars and molars of the lower jaw. As deer grow older enamel wears off the teeth, and the age can be more accurately determined by differences in the amount of wear. Hunters and wildlife watchers can’t examine teeth. But they can estimate the age of antlered and antlerless deer by considering the shape and proportionality of body parts live or through webcam images. Here are some signs to look for: 5 months-1 1/2 years By autumn, most of the current year’s fawns have lost their spots, but they’re still very small — larger than a big dog but clearly thin, still

slightly awkward and never more than a few leaps away from their mother. On average, does each drop 1 1/2 fawns per year. Twins are common when food is ample, and triplets can be born in browse-filled suburbs. Behavior also offers hints to an animal’s age. Spindly-legged deer with no visible antlers playing when they should be eating near a watchful doe were probably born in the current year. At 1 1/2 , they are still smaller than mom. Yearlings have skinny necks, d i s p ro p o r t i o n a t e l y long legs and thin, lean bodies with hind quarters that are larger than the front end. Males will have spikes or forked antlers. I m a g e DescriptionThis 2 1/2 -year-old buck has a thin neck, small shoulders and a back end that seems bigger than his front end. (Wikipedia) 2 1/2 years A buck could have a six- to eight-point rack, a fit body and be sexually active during the rut. On closer

examination, however, the antlers will seldom be wider than the ears and may appear on the thin side. Despite a muscular build, the necks of males and females remain thinner than the brisket. The belly is flat, but the back end still appears bigger than the front end. 3 1/2 years Full antlers for bucks and in both sexes, a thick, full neck that appears to stop at a big, broad chest. Look for a firm, flat belly and no dip or sway of the back. In the third year, the front finally seems larger and more developed than the hind quarters. Adult deer have learned a thing or two. Behaviorally they’re more cautious, creeping through grape thickets, hesitating, cocking their heads with ears up and alert. In the rut, however, they still could spring out of the brush and run headlong into a tractor-trailer. 4 1/2 years A buck of this age has developed about 90% of his antler potential, although that depends

on habitat availability. Beneath the head, the necks of fully mature bucks and does are large and full from the chin to the barrel chest as it curves into the belly. There’s a bit of paunch to that belly and the middle of the back seems to droop a bit from carrying all that weight. 5 1/2 years and older In their fifth year, males and females look sort of top heavy with d i s p ro p o r t i o n a t e l y shorter legs. A thick neck meets front shoulders covered with a muscular hump. Below a swayed back hangs a sagging belly. Bucks of this age may have spectacular racks, but on the far side of 5 1/2 years teeth may become too worn to efficiently browse. Disease may also contribute to less intake of nutrition and less robust antlers. The only time antler shape directly correlates to age is when thin, spindly spikes emerge from the head of a big, full-bodied buck. Don’t say old, he’s just past his prime.

Low voltage, power issues Gift of Memory in Bradford Township Program accepting gift donations for children in need BY DANIELLA LANGIANESE

SHINGLEHOUSE — Kevin Dusenbury’s Gift of Memory Program, which benefits Potter County’s Christmas House, is currently in its 22nd year. Through Dusenbury’s business, Virgil L. Howard Funeral Home in Shinglehouse, local residents can contribute presents in memory of their deceased loved ones to the organization, which distributes gifts to over 1,200 Potter County

children and elderly during the holidays. Again this year, the Christmas House has requested that this program begin accepting donations early so that their organization will have distribution to the recipients as early as possible. Therefore donations will be collected until Friday, November 18. In purchasing gifts this year, the Christmas House asks for donations of items for girls ages 9 to 12, as well as

for teenagers. They also request items for boys from 2 to 12 years of age and also for teenage boys. In the past 21 years, gifts too numerous to count were collected at the funeral home and presented to the Christmas House for distribution to needy families. Those wishing to make donations of new, unwrapped toys or gifts can call Dusenbury at (814) 697-6570.

Wide spread “brown outs” or moments of low voltage were e x p e r i e n c e d throughout Bradford Township on Thursday, from the west end of Bradford to Lewis Run, customers experienced “a few moments of voltage dimming,” according to PENELEC spokesperson, Todd Meyers. Earlier in the afternoon, then again around 3:20 p.m. the lights noticeably went on and off, or dimmed, a few times in The Era offices. Reportedly, the episodes of low voltage extended from issues with a non-electrical line running between a substation in the west end of Bradford to the

substation in Lewis Run, reported Meyers. “This morning, around 10 a.m., there was a momentary type of blip that customers in Bradford and surrounding areas would have experienced,” said Meyers. “So that had us looking immediately for what may have caused it. Turns out, a line that runs just south of Bradford from the Lewis Run substation to the substation on the west end was down. “The wire was a non-conducting line, a neutral wire to help with lightning protection. The line was fixed and the conductor reset. However, when the line was re-energized they noticed a problem was still there — some

customers may have noticed low voltage issues with electrical services, which lasted about 15 seconds, or so,” explained Meyers. Crews from PENELEC returned to the line, which they repaired earlier, and walked the line from the substation in Lewis Run towards the substation in the west end of Bradford. While walking the line the workmen found a tree which had fallen, and was resting on the line. “The crews are currently out working to remove the tree,” Meyers reported to The Era at approximately 4:40 p.m. No further low voltage issues were noted later in the evening.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.