The elk feeding program that has been in place above
the Sagewillow Association for many years has been discontinued. As a
result, the animals were much more visible during the 2007-08 winter
throughout Elkhorn. Though a few owners encouraged the Board of
Directors to become involved in an alternative feeding program, the
decision was made to take the advice of Idaho Fish and Game and not do
so. The following article was provided by Reagan Berkley, a Biologist
with the Idaho Fish and Game.
This past winter, both Wood River Valley newspapers
featured several articles and letters to the editor regarding the
disagreement between the Community School and Sagewillow homeowners. The
Idaho Fish and Game staff has responded to phone calls and questions
from reporters, concerned citizens, and representatives from both the
school and the homeowners. Fish and Game has long maintained that elk
populations should be managed in proportion to the habitat that is
available to support them. Because of the current conflict, we feel this
is an opportune time to remind residents of the pitfalls of artificial
feeding and offer a brief assessment of the situation in the Elkhorn
area.
Winter feeding of elk is by no means a new phenomenon
in the Wood River Valley. There is one Fish and Game-sanctioned feed
site in the Warm Springs drainage, and numerous small and large private
feed sites around the valley. The feed site near the Sagewillow
subdivision is one of the older feed sites in the valley; the Dumke
family began feeding elk there in the late 1970’s or early 1980’s, and
the Community School has continued the practice.
The Elkhorn situation illustrates some familiar
problems associated with elk feeding. Feed sites that are close to roads
increase the chances of elk-vehicle collisions and pose hazards to both
elk and motorists. Elk do not remain at feed sites all the time; rather,
they wander in and out to obtain food. En route, they may browse through
yards, damaging private property and landscaping. The presence of elk
may attract mountain lions and perhaps wolves to these areas. Domestic
animals, such as cats and dogs, often come into conflict with elk and
their predators.
Winter feeding also poses many potential long-term
problems for elk. The temptation of easily accessible food lures them
away from the remaining natural winter range that occurs in some canyons
and foothills adjacent to the Wood River corridor. Historically, some
elk wintered in small groups of 10-15 animals in and around the Wood
River Valley, while others migrated southward toward lower-elevation
wintering grounds. Older cow elk tend to be the leaders of elk groups,
and their memories help direct younger animals along traditional
migration routes. Feeding operations interrupt these natural migrations
and erode the herd’s knowledge of migration routes and locations of
winter habitat. The longer a feeding operation continues, the fewer elk
remain that remember how to move to natural winter habitat.
The increased density of animals congregating at feed
sites can also pose problems for elk. Disease spreads more readily
through animal contact, particularly at feed sites where animals are
sharing food and jostling for access.
Although feeding elk seems to be the right thing to
do to prevent winter hardships, elk are wild animals, and are therefore
equipped with the ability, developed over thousands of years of co
evolution with their habitat, to cope with the difficulties of winter.
The hard reality that some animals die during the winter is how nature
maintains a balance between available habitat and the number of animals
that use that habitat.
The well-meaning individuals who feed elk aim to
mitigate for the fact that much of the winter habitat in the Wood River
valley has been developed. Although their hearts are in the right place,
there are two important facts to remember. First, there is still winter
range for elk in Blaine County. Small groups of elk can, and in many
cases do, winter on south-facing slopes and in valleys adjacent to the
Big Wood River. Second, elk are wild animals that rely on experience and
instincts to survive. Feeding erodes the experience of an elk herd, and
forces them into human-dominated habitats and situations, both of which
reduce their ability to survive in the wild, and diminishes the essence
of what makes a wild animal wild.
The Community School, Sagewillow residents, and the
press have all asked us "what happens if the school stops feeding the
elk?" The answer to this question is uncertain, but some scenarios are
more likely than others. For the first 2-5 years, elk will still expect
to find handouts at their traditional feed site. When they realize there
is no feed, they will likely choose the most physiologically expedient
option: move to the nearest and easiest food source, which will likely
be trees and shrubs in nearby subdivisions. This, of course, is the very
problem that has prompted the current conflict between the homeowners
and the school. Stopping feeding will be hard; it will be politically
and socially unpopular, and some elk may not make it through a hard
winter. Over the past two years, we have relayed this information to all
of the parties involved in this situation.
However, there is hope. In the long-term, stopping
feeding is the right thing to do for both elk and humans. Elk do not
belong in subdivisions. The constant presence of people, cars, lights,
fences, and dogs are unnatural stresses that wild elk are poorly
equipped to handle. Elk belong on natural winter range, such as the
south-facing slopes in Parker and Keystone Gulches that exists behind
the school and subdivision. Many Wood River elk still migrate southward
during the winters to the considerable winter range that exists towards
the south end of the valley.
Undoubtedly, some damage will occur to landscaping
within nearby subdivisions. Many of the trees and shrubs used in
ornamental plantings are very attractive to elk as winter forage.
However, to help minimize private property damage and speed elk
transition to winter range, homeowners can help make subdivisions an
unwelcome place for elk by using noise and lights to haze elk out of
their yards and using temporary fencing and other barriers to prevent
elk from using landscaping as winter forage. These measures will
expedite the process of moving many of the elk onto better, natural
habitat.
More importantly, the school and homeowners can stay
committed to the decision not to feed elk. Occasional feeding of elk, no
matter how well-intentioned, will only serve to lengthen the time it
takes for elk to learn to use natural winter range.
Finally, we have been asked how Fish and Game can
help with the current situation in Elkhorn.
Specifically, many residents remember that we trapped
and moved elk off the Warm Springs golf course in 2005, and we have been
asked whether we would consider trapping and moving the Elkhorn animals.
We consider trapping and transplanting elk an option of last-resort for
several reasons. First, any trapping and transplant operation involves
potential risk for people and elk. Second, it is our goal, whenever
possible, to keep Wood River Valley elk in the Wood River Valley. Unlike
the Warm Springs situation, the Elkhorn elk are close to sufficient
winter range and could eventually learn to use this natural habitat.
Third, Fish and Game is funded by hunting and fishing licenses and
federal grants; not taxpayer dollars. We are hesitant to use sportsmen’s
money to fund an expensive trapping effort intended to solve a problem
not created by sportsmen. Finally, it seems futile to continue trapping
and transplanting elk in the Wood River Valley without assurances that
artificial feeding will truly and perpetually be discontinued. Such an
effort would require too much money and risk to only have someone start
feeding again two or even 10 years from now. For this reason, we
encourage both the school and the community to consider drafting and
championing a "no feeding" ordinance in Blaine County.
In short, we support the Community School’s decision
to stop feeding elk this winter, and in all subsequent winters. We will
do everything we can to provide technical advice and expertise to both
the school and the homeowners as they face the next few difficult
winters. We will continue, as we have in the past, to assess winter
conditions and both the size and condition of local elk herds in the
Wood River Valley. Although stopping feeding will undoubtedly be hard in
many respects, it is in the best of interest of elk and people in the
Elkhorn area.