Ottawa coyotes more popular than ever

coyote1

The eastern coyote has been a huge topic of conversation here on the Outdoors Guy over the past couple of years. Even when the subject is changed, things always seem to revert back to wile e coyote and its place(or lack thereof) in the Nation’s Capital.

MNR Biologist Scott Smithers recently spoke with Ron Corbett of the Ottawa SUN to share, what I would describe as, important insight into the coyote situation from a wildlife management standpoint.

It would seem apparent that even an MNR Biologist realizes something needs to be done about predator control, but alas politics and animals rights rear their ugly heads.

I see the coyote now like that kid in elementary school who was always getting in trouble. My parents would tell me “yeah, but he has troubles at home”, and the teachers would label him a problem child or blame it on upbringing. Sure, he’d be good for few days but you just knew things were on the edge of boiling over at any given moment.

Our coyotes are like this troubled kid in school. Sure, it may not be completely the child’s fault but they continue to disrupt the class so something needs to be done about it.

Here is Ron Corbett’s article:

Put people before coyotes, biologist

By Ron Corbett

On Sunday, I wrote about the problems a woman in Nepean was having during the Christmas holidays with a coyote in her backyard.

The eastern Ontario biologist for the natural resources ministry is aware of the story and thinks it should be a wake-up call for the city of Ottawa, especially as it pursues a new wildlife management strategy.

“Most cities in Ontario are in denial when it comes to coyotes,” says Scott Smithers. “For years we have been telling people that coyotes are not dangerous, that there have never been coyote attacks on people in Eastern Canada.

“Well, we can’t say that anymore. There have been attacks. And the truth is, coyotes are changing – their habits, the sheer number of them – it’s a very different situation from what it was even five years ago.” 

Last month a seven-year-old girl was bitten by a coyote in her backyard in Oakville. In October 2009, a teenager was attacked and killed by coyotes in Cape Breton. These are the attacks Smithers is talking about.

He says a reassessment on how the city handles wildlife issues – from beavers in Stittsville to coyotes in Nepean – is “long overdue” although he worries “a lot of emotional arguments” may doom the exercise before it even gets started.

He won’t come right out and say it, but he’s talking about political correctness. About treating wild animals like Disney characters, little doe-eyed Bambis that can never be hunted, trapped, or even bothered.

Yet we need this debate. You just have to look at an aerial map of Ottawa to see why. We are surrounded by wilderness, with green space running like the spokes on a wagon wheel from the rural boundary right up to the downtown core.

Smithers says there are probably coyotes living within a kilometre of Parliament Hill. “We are a southern Ontario city,” he says, “with Northern Ontario wildlife issues.” 

Despite this rather unique characteristic of our city, we have no strategy on how to manage our wildlife, or what to do when there are conflicts between animals and people. We simply refer people to other levels of government. Or expect the police to deal with it.

Two years ago — when coyotes started eating lap dogs in Osgoode — the city finally decided it was time to come up with some sort of plan. It formed an advisory committee, to make recommendations on a municipal wildlife management strategy.

Smithers sits on that committee, although he is not optimistic the city will end up with a good plan.

“To be frank, I found it a frustrating experience,” he says. “A lot of stakeholders were involved, and there was a lot of emotion at the meetings. I’m not sure good science is going to dictate the city’s policy.” What might carry the day is the “emotional argument” that says animals should never be hurt, under any circumstances.

Smithers says such a policy would be foolhardy. He says people should come first in a city, even though he is a trained biologist and hopes the city policy will respect wildlife.

“It’s like that woman in Nepean with the coyote in her backyard,” says Smithers. “That coyote clearly is showing no fear of humans, and that’s dangerous. You can’t just tell her to co-exist with that animal.” Yet that’s exactly what many animal rights groups tell municipalities to do. The most egregious example might be Glendale, Arizona, which debated a cull of coyotes after a four-year-old girl was killed by coyotes.

Animal Defense League member Pamelyn Ferdin, covered in fake blood, appeared at the council meeting to oppose the cull and to argue the child had not actually been killed by coyotes, but had been the victim of child abuse.

The cull went ahead, and within 80 days 56 coyotes had been trapped or killed within half-a-mile of the attack site.

“You shouldn’t walk around in fear of coyotes. You need to realize these attacks are extremely rare,” says Smithers. “At the same time, you shouldn’t walk around thinking wild animals are pets.” City staff is currently putting the finishing touches on the wildlife management strategy report. It should come before city council this spring.

It will be interesting to see how the city has responded to the various stakeholders in this debate. Let’s hope people get as much respect as animals, and science trumps emotion.

 

Other related coyote articles:

http://www.ottawasun.com/2012/02/04/coyotes-run-wild-in-ottawa

http://www.ottawasun.com/2012/01/20/coyote-bites-girl-after-chasing-her-home

 

Outdoorsguy

Asian Carp – MNR Rapid Response Plan

Asiancarp

(Giant Asian Carp caught in American Midwest)

Thanks to Heather Visser of the MNR for sending me details on the Ministry’s Rapid Response Plan – a report for dealing with the dreaded Asian Carp in the Great Lakes.

Here’s the line I like:  “only a week earlier a fish importer had been fined $50,000 for trying to truck 1,800 kilograms of live Asian carp across the Windsor/ Detroit border to sell in the Greater Toronto Area.”  Ok, what was that imbecile thinking???

Here is a copy of that MNR document:

Asian Carp rapid response plan

 

If you fish in the Great Lakes or their tributaries, your favourite catch may be walleye or bass, or perhaps muskie or lake trout.  So how would you feel if you came home empty-handed because nine out of ten fish out there were plankton-eating bighead or silver carp – AKA Asian carp?

 

That’s the reality now in parts of the Mississippi and Illinois rivers. And that’s why Ontario, Canada and the U.S. want to keep the voracious, invasive Asian carp out of the Great Lakes.

 

The need for a coordinated plan to fight Asian carp led the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, with support from the Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada, to host a “table-top exercise” in March. The exercise simulated an incident where Asian carp get into Ontario waters. The aim was to test if the agencies involved are ready to respond quickly to stop their spread.

 

“Preventing Asian carp from spreading into the Great Lakes is the most cost-effective control measure we’ll ever have,” says Ontario Minister of Natural Resources Linda Jeffrey. “This exercise was about making sure all the agencies involved work together, and identifying areas where we’re vulnerable.”

 

For the March 11 exercise, participants rehearsed how they would respond if an accident on a bridge over the Thames River in southwestern Ontario caused a truckload of live Asian carp to be dumped in and near the river. It was a timely choice – only a week earlier a fish importer had been fined $50,000 for trying to truck 1,800 kilograms of live Asian carp across the Windsor/ Detroit border to sell in the Greater Toronto Area. It’s illegal to possess live Asian carp in Ontario.

 

The term “Asian carp” includes four species – bighead, silver, grass and black carp. The bighead and silver carp currently pose the biggest threat. They weigh up to 45 kilograms and can grow to more than a metre long. As filter feeders that can eat 20 per cent of their body weight a day in plankton, they’re able to grow and multiply faster than native species. In some areas of the U.S. carp populations are doubling every year.

 

After escaping from aquaculture ponds in the southern U.S. in the 1970s and 80s, Asian carp spread northward, raising fears they could enter the Great Lakes through waterways in the Chicago area. Today in parts of the Mississippi River Basin they have outcompeted native fish and make up as much as 90 per cent of all fish by weight. Yet their commercial value is very low compared to native species.

 

As well as causing the catastrophic decline of native fish populations and the economic devastation of sport and commercial fisheries, silver carp in particular are a hazard to people on the water. When they’re disturbed by boat motors the fish jump as much as two metres out of the water. Boaters and waterskiers on the Illinois River have already been hit and injured. 

 

Canadian and U.S. experts agree that Asian carp would thrive in the Great Lakes, and that quick action is the only way to prevent Asian carp from spreading if they are found in the Great Lakes Basin.

 

During the table-top exercise, local MNR staff described how they would place nets upstream and downstream to catch and identify fish in the river, test the fish to find out if they could reproduce, and confirm if the river habitat was suitable for Asian carp. The agencies involved also had to decide if any local species at risk might be harmed by the control measures, and keep governments, partners, the public and the media informed.

 

“Ontario’s recreational fishery contributes $500 million to the province’s economy each year, our commercial fishery is worth up to $215 million a year, and the Great Lakes ecosystem is priceless,” says Minister Jeffrey. “With so much at stake, we have to be prepared.”

 

How You Can Help:

 

  • If you believe you have seen or caught an Asian carp, or you have found one in your bait bucket, DO NOT release the fish. Humanely kill it and report your sighting. Please visit www.invadingspecies.com to fill out an online Invasive Species reporting form, or call 1-800-563-7711 toll-free.

 

  • Check your bait and don’t dump your bait bucket in the water.

Outdoors Guy takes a big Provincial step

youth

(Photo depicts how I feel right now)

Ok folks, this may sound hard to believe for those who don’t know me that well, BUT, brace yourself for this…and promise not to laugh. 

I do NOT currently have an Ontario Hunting Card..there, I said it!! 

Yes, after living in Ontario for nearly 15-years, I thought it was high time I take the Ontario Hunter’s exam to finally get my very own, very first Ontario Hunting Card. 

I’m a big boy now – soon to be hunting in a very big province! 

In my 30+ years of hunting on the Quebec-side, I honestly never saw the need to pursue game over here; nor did I really have the sparetime. 

Until now… 

Let’s just say the coyote situation has prompted me to get my arse in gear; as it were. Who knows, I might even get back into trapping too. At least I’ve already taken the ON trapping course and managed to hold onto the certificate. 

Believe it or not, I actually did take the Ontario Hunter’s Safety Course back in 1988, while I was attending Carleton University. I never did end-up taking the exam or getting my card, though, don’t ask me why. 

Unfortunately the MNR told me yesterday they have long since lost any record of that course from the 80’s, but fortunately with my Quebec hunting card I am allowed to challenge the Ontario Hunter’s Exam, but only once.

Yippee!!! (Wait a sec, I’m not there yet)

If I pass, I can upgrade my current Outdoors Card to my very own IMA HUNTER Card. (Except with 187/Brown on it) If I fail, well, lets just say I will be acting rather sheepish for awhile..never to speak of this again. (and may even be forced to delete this post) 

huntercard

When I finally decided I wanted to take this Ontario hunting thing by the horns,  I got in contact with my old friend Wenda Cochran. She will be fixing me up with the Exam to be held on March 27th in Carp. 

I have it marked on my calendar with an asterisk!! 

You see, I took the Firearms Exam (PAL) with Wenda several years ago and it was as smooth as butter. She and her husband Peter do a marvellous job, so keep them in mind. Wenda is in charge of the Hunter Safety course, the Canadian Firearms Course & Exams, Possession & Acquisition, Minor’s Permit and Hunting License. 

To contact Wenda Cochran: 

http://lanark.realontario.ca/browse-sectors/education/13957.html 

Who knows, this whole Ontario hunting thing may turn into a great long-term relationship in a province which certainly has a lot to offer, from all the stories I’ve heard(& written) over the years.

Feel free to comment(those who aren’t too shocked or disgusted)

Outdoorsguy

Moose shot and abandoned across Ontario

Mooseleft

This is the kind of news that makes hunters and conservationists sick to their stomach! 

According to the MNR, there are more than 18 cases of abandoned moose currently under investigation across Ontario!! 

The Ministry of Natural Resources is seeking the public’s help in solving cases of the unlawful shooting and abandonment of moose across Ontario.

A number of investigations are currently ongoing. The ministry has evidence that the hunter or hunters were aware the animal had been shot and killed, and that the moose carcass was abandoned intentionally.

Individual hunters are only permitted to lawfully hunt an adult male (bull), adult female (cow) or a calf depending on the moose tag they possess. Hunters who mistakenly shoot a moose to which they are not entitled are encouraged to contact a conservation officer immediately to have the circumstances of the situation investigated.

Moose hunting in Ontario is highly regulated, and the majority of hunters respect the laws established to ensure the future of this activity. Moose hunters bring a significant economic benefit to many small communities across the province and travel great distances to participate in the hunt.

If you have any information about these cases or any natural resources violation, please call 1-877-TIPS-MNR (847-7667) toll-free any time or contact your ministry office during regular business hours. You can also call Crime Stoppers anonymously at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477).

Its official Ontario Elk Hunt this fall

elkpic

Well, its official, the first Ontario elk hunt in more than a Century gets under way this fall!

Thanks to Heather Visser of the MNR in Toronto for sending me this Press info:

The first elk hunt in Ontario in more than a century will be held in the Bancroft-North Hastings area this upcoming fall.

The elk population in the area has flourished and continues to grow at a healthy rate since being reintroduced to the province 10 years ago. The elk hunt will help manage the population in this area, and will be carefully harmonized to ensure a long-term sustainable elk population.

This is part of the government’s Open Ontario plan to support the region’s economy and environment.

 

“This hunt is a result of the successful restoration of elk in the Bancroft-North Hastings area and the first in more than a century. This is an opportunity to help the region’s economic growth and ensure a healthy elk population in the area for future generations.” – Linda Jeffrey, Minister of Natural Resources

“The McGuinty government has worked with all community partners to determine the best way to manage the elk population in the area.” – MPP Leona Dombrowsky, Prince Edward–Hastings

“The OFA was pleased to work closely with the Ontario government in establishing the first elk hunt in more than a century. We look forward to the implementation of the hunt which will help address issues raised by farmers in the area while ensuring a sustainable elk population.”- Bette Jean Crews, President, Ontario Federation of Agriculture

“The Ontario government, the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters, and other partners have contributed countless hours and hundreds of thousands of dollars to restore elk to their original ranges in Ontario. We are pleased that this will provide a new hunting opportunity and some relief for the Bancroft-North Hastings agricultural community from the pressures created by the growing elk population.” – Mike Reader, Executive Director, O.F.A.H.

QUICK FACTS
Applications for an elk licence and seal will be made available in the spring.

The open season for elk will be one week long and take place from the third Monday in September to the following Sunday.

Between 1998 and 2001, the elk population was restored by shipping elk herd from Alberta to four sites in Ontario including Bancroft-North Hastings.

For more information on the Ontario Elk Hunt:

http://www.mnr.gov.on.ca/stdprodconsume/groups/lr/@mnr/@fw/documents/document/stdprod_068306.pdf

Outdoorsguy

Want to go elk hunting in Ontario

  ONElk

If you answered “Yes” to this question, I suggest you check out the links below and get involved in the review process. 

It appears as though an Ontario Elk Hunt may be on the horizon, and let’s just say with everything else going on these days, timing couldn’t have been better: 

Environmental Registry number: 011-0741

Title: Proposed Elk Harvest Allocation System

http://www.ebr.gov.on.ca/ERS-WEB-External/displaynoticecontent.do?noticeId=MTEwNTI1&statusId=MTY1ODk0&language=en

Environmental Registry number: 011-0742

Title: Proposed Elk Population Objective for the Bancroft-North Hastings Area Herd 

http://www.ebr.gov.on.ca/ERS-WEB-External/displaynoticecontent.do?noticeId=MTEwNTI2&statusId=MTY1ODk1&language=en

Environmental Registry number: 011-0743

Title: Proposed Elk Population Objective Setting Guidelines 

http://www.ebr.gov.on.ca/ERS-WEB-External/displaynoticecontent.do?noticeId=MTEwNTI3&statusId=MTY1ODk2&language=en

Environmental Registry number: 011-0744

Title: Proposed Elk Harvest Management Guidelines 

http://www.ebr.gov.on.ca/ERS-WEB-External/displaynoticecontent.do?noticeId=MTEwNTI4&statusId=MTY1ODk3&language=en

Environmental Registry number: 011-0745

Title: Proposed Policy for Protecting Agricultural Property from Elk 

http://www.ebr.gov.on.ca/ERS-WEB-External/displaynoticecontent.do?noticeId=MTEwNTI5&statusId=MTY1ODk4&language=en

Environmental Registry number: 011-0746

Title: Proposed Regulations to establish an Elk Hunt

http://www.ebr.gov.on.ca/ERS-WEB-External/displaynoticecontent.do?noticeId=MTEwNTMw&statusId=MTY1ODk5&language=en 

Comment period: between August 30, 2010 and October 14, 2010 (45 days)

Does Ontario hunting attractant ban make scents

Tinks1

The Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources (OMNR) 11th hour decision to ban, among other things, the use natural hunting attractants will come as a shock to many local hunters.

I am one of the few hunters, however, not at all surprised by this decision; in fact, I predicted it happening in a column I wrote for the Ottawa SUN back in May 10, 2007, after the Province of Nova Scotia announced an outright ban on the use of hunting scents that contained bodily fluid.

I just knew Ontario would be close behind…

At the time, it meant that all doe-in estrus and dominant buck lures we know and love were illegal for use in that province.  The Nova Scotia Natural Resources department justified the ban by saying “they don’t have CWD in their province and they don’t want it either.” While there was no arguing that point there was also, to my knowledge, little evidence to prove that CWD can be contracted through commercial deer scents.

Now 3 years later, the Ontario government, as predicted, has taken a similar stance, however CWD, as far as I know, has been diagnosed almost exclusively on commercial game farms in the west, and there is still no real evidence to indicate that hunting scents or attractants are the source of any disease.

My good friend who I’ve known for nearly 10 years, Terry Rohm of Tink’s Scents – makers of America’s top deer lure – certainly knows a thing or two about scents and lures. He was another person left scratching his head back in 2007 when the Nova Scotia ban was announced; with obvious concerned about sales of his product in Canada. Fortunately Terry and Tinks had already been busy developing a synthetic line of scents and lures, which they have marketed ever since.

terryRohm

He admits, though, that the stinky natural stuff is still preferred by hunters.

Tinks2

Terry was so concerned about the reasoning behind the Nova Scotia ban; he set up a meeting with Dr. Karl V Miller to discuss, among other things, Chronic Wasting Disease. (CWD) Dr. Miller explained to him that through testing, so far CWD has not been able to be transmitted by deer urine.

I am still waiting for someone to produce evidence to the contrary, in the meantime check out the MNR for more details on the hunting attractant ban and a few other goodies:

http://www.mnr.gov.on.ca/en/Business/FW/2ColumnSubPage/STEL02_168766.html?utm_source=Twitter&utm_medium=Micro-blog&utm_term=FallHuntingSeason&utm_content=ChronicWastingDisease&utm_campaign=Hunting#attractants

Outdoorsguy

Pickle Jar Bear may have broken free

bearjar

Reports from North-western Ontario seem to indicate the black bear who has spent more than 2-weeks with a plastic pickle jar stuck on his head, has managed to free itself.

The MNR office in Thunder Bay received a call from a resident who claims to have found a broken plastic container matching the description of the one first seen lodged on a bear’s head more than 2-weeks ago!

Hair analysis will be performed on the plastic jar for the presence of bear hair.

Another witness who saw the bear just two days ago and snapped a photo of it, claims it was in an entirely different area at the time and is sceptical of the jar found.

So there you go, the bear may or may not be free.  I will keep you posted!

Outdoorsguy

Please steer clear of wayward moose

moosefam

We all know the difficulties faced when a large mammal ventures too close to town. We’ve seen it happen a lot lately. Sometimes it ends well and other times not so well. 

The most recent incident involves a family of moose spotted in the NRC property near Montreal Rd and Blair. For the time being, these wayward moose have moved back into a forested area, but for how long? The blistering heat, the flies and frustration will, undoubtedly, push them back out onto city streets. It’s only a matter of time. 

It has been brought to my attention that some concerned citizens have actually divulged the exact location of said moose, and even went so far as to provide Google Earth co-ordinates of where they can be spotted. 

As the city, MNR and nearly formed wildlife task force deal with situations like this as they arise, I would ask the public NOT to interfere. 

The undue stress and commotion of people stopping-by to catch a glimpse of the Bullwinkle family could have some serious adverse effects. 

If you really want to help, just leave these moose well enough along and allow the professionals a chance to take care of things. 

Outdoorsguy

Police Chief White lashes out at MNR

  vern

Ottawa Police Chief Vern White pulled no punches with his jabs aimed at the Ministry of Natural Resources, in what he describes as thier ‘hands off’ approach to urban wildlife issues. 
It was announced Friday that a private wildlife officer would be hired to deal with all moose, deer, bear and other large mammal encounters around town.

Chief White says that’s fine, but what about the MNR?

“I’ve worked right across this country and I’ve never seen anywhere else where we have big game animals in the city and it becomes the city’s responsibility,” said White. 

It will be interesting to see what, if any, response the Chief receives from MNR Minister Linda Jeffrey on this matter.

Jeffrey

The identity of the new Wildlife Officer and his/her team has not yet been released, but word on the street is that an announcement is pending.

Outdoorsguy