Bighoun52
Active Member
Anyone see Ben rising posted about getting hit in coschocton and Holmes counties. Need a frost!!! Haven’t noticed any bucks going missing but now I’m worried
Ben had it on his Instagram storyNeed rain in Coshocton, bad. @Bighoun52 can you add where you saw that Ben R. Post did a quick look but nothing I could find.
Between June and now total rainfall at my weather station on the farm is way below avg for 43812 zip.
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* Oct Actual is only the fist 7 days of Oct.
Current ODNR EHD map.
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Hey. You beat me to that joke/thought by 19 min. I was thinking the same thing as I read the comments. Sad the thought comes into mind even though I realize it is not what happened.Is it just me or does anyone else wonder if this shit didn't come out of a fucking Wuhan lab somewhere. Food shortage?
There are three forms of hemorrhagic disease – peracute, acute and chronic. Depending on virulence of the viral strain, the peracute form can kill deer in 1-3 days. Acute is the classic form and deer may live for several days. The chronic form is typified by growth interruptions on the hooves and deer often survive this form. Deer that survive develop immunity to the disease and does may pass temporary immunity to their fawns through their milk. Most deer that die do so around water because they develop high fevers and seek water to cool their bodies.My main hunting property was hit hard a few years back. So far I have been lucky. It has me wondering if the deer at this property have some kind of natural immunity due to past exposure. Anyone else experiencing this?
And. Can it be passed down to the fawns? (Change DNA)There are three forms of hemorrhagic disease – peracute, acute and chronic. Depending on virulence of the viral strain, the peracute form can kill deer in 1-3 days. Acute is the classic form and deer may live for several days. The chronic form is typified by growth interruptions on the hooves and deer often survive this form. Deer that survive develop immunity to the disease and does may pass temporary immunity to their fawns through their milk. Most deer that die do so around water because they develop high fevers and seek water to cool their bodies.
I guess they can. Interesting, wonder how many actually do?
Not sure if they’ve gone that far with it yet.And. Can it be passed down to the fawns? (Change DNA)
I hope everyone is reporting what they find to ODNR. They can't accurately track this if they don't know about it.
I encourage everyone to watch this video. Amazing amount of good information.I've reported the ones I have found.
Here's a video on EHD (apologies if it's already been posted). This guy does mention passing on immunity to fawns.